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My Groom Poisoned Me to Steal My Inheritance Novel Cover

My Groom Poisoned Me to Steal My Inheritance

The scratch of my fountain pen against the vellum deed was the only sound in the office, a rhythmic whisper of intent. I was signing away ten million dollars for a Tribeca penthouse—a wedding gift for Bennett. It was a small price to pay for the way his eyes lit up when he spoke of "light" and "architectural soul." Three days into our marriage, and I was still foolish enough to believe I was nurturing a genius. "Athena, stop." Marcus Richardson’s voice wasn't just serious; it was a heavy, physical thing that arrested my hand mid-signature. My family’s attorney—a man who had weathered SEC investigations and hostile takeovers without blinking—looked pale. He placed a hand over the document, his knuckles white. "It’s just a deed, Marcus," I said, offering a smile that felt too bright for the sudden gloom in the room. "Bennett needs the north-facing light for his studio." "Bennett doesn't need the light. He needs a lawyer." Marcus slid a thick manila dossier across the mahogany desk. It hit the leather blotter with a dull thud.
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Chapter 1

The scratch of my fountain pen against the vellum deed was the only sound in the office, a rhythmic whisper of intent. I was signing away ten million dollars for a Tribeca penthouse—a wedding gift for Bennett. It was a small price to pay for the way his eyes lit up when he spoke of "light" and "architectural soul." Three days into our marriage, and I was still foolish enough to believe I was nurturing a genius.

"Athena, stop."

Marcus Richardson’s voice wasn't just serious; it was a heavy, physical thing that arrested my hand mid-signature. My family’s attorney—a man who had weathered SEC investigations and hostile takeovers without blinking—looked pale. He placed a hand over the document, his knuckles white.

"It’s just a deed, Marcus," I said, offering a smile that felt too bright for the sudden gloom in the room. "Bennett needs the north-facing light for his studio."

"Bennett doesn't need the light. He needs a lawyer." Marcus slid a thick manila dossier across the mahogany desk. It hit the leather blotter with a dull thud. "The City Clerk filed the marriage license this morning. Read the names, Athena."

I laughed, a breathless, confused sound. "I know who I married."

"Do you?"

I flipped the folder open. The certified document stared back at me, the seal raised and mocking. *Groom: Bennett Cruz.* My eyes drifted to the line below, expecting my own name, the Richardson legacy stamped in ink. Instead, the letters twisted into a grotesque impossibility.

*Bride: Joelle Weaver.*

My personal assistant. The girl I had plucked from a shelter, clothed, and fed. The girl who had held my train as I walked down the aisle.

"This is a clerical error," I whispered, though the bile rising in my throat suggested otherwise.

"It’s fraud," Marcus corrected, his voice like grinding stone. "And twenty minutes ago, Bennett attempted to authorize a transfer of assets into a joint account. With Joelle."

I didn't wait for the rest. I was already moving, the dossier crushed in my grip.

The elevator ride to the penthouse felt like a descent into hell, the pressure building behind my eyes until I thought the capillaries might burst. When the doors slid open, the scent hit me first—expensive vintage champagne and the cloying perfume I had bought for Joelle last Christmas.

They were on the terrace, silhouetted against the winter skyline. Bennett’s arm was draped around her waist, his posture relaxed, victorious. They turned as I stepped onto the marble, but they didn't flinch. They didn't pull apart.

"You're early," Bennett said. The tortured, sensitive artist I had fallen for was gone. In his place stood a stranger with a sneer that looked too comfortable on his face.

"The license," I choked out, throwing the crumpled paper at his feet. "Explain."

Joelle stepped forward, her heels clicking sharply on the stone. She wasn't the timid mouse who organized my calendar anymore. She looked at me with a hunger that was almost feral. She picked up the paper, smoothed it out, and then ripped it down the middle.

"It means the pre-nup you signed is garbage," Joelle said, her voice dripping with a venom I realized she must have been hoarding for years. "I'm the legal wife. I get half. And since you're the mistress now, you get nothing."

I looked at Bennett, waiting for him to deny it, to claim coercion. Instead, he took a sip of champagne, watching me over the rim of the glass with bored detachment.

"Why?" I asked, the word fracturing.

"Because you're exhausting, Athena," Bennett sighed, setting the glass down. "Always hovering. 'Fix this shading, Bennett.' 'Use the chisel like this, Bennett.' Did you really think a genius could love a micromanaging checkbook?"

He closed the distance between us, leaning in close. "And don't bother trying for a sympathy pregnancy to save the marriage. Those vitamins I made sure you took every morning? Fertility blockers. High dosage. We couldn't have a little Richardson brat complicating the inheritance when you eventually... faded away."

The world tilted. The nausea wasn't just emotional anymore; it was a physical rejection of the poison he had fed me with a kiss. I looked at Joelle, who was smirking, wearing my life like a stolen coat.

I turned and ran.

I didn't stop until I reached the main Richardson Estate in the Hamptons. I bypassed the main house, the servants, the warmth. I went straight to the old carriage house—the ice studio.

The air inside was kept at a constant twenty degrees. It hit my skin like a slap, bracing and clean. I locked the heavy steel door and collapsed against it, sliding down to the concrete floor. Surrounded by chainsaws, chisels, and massive, uncarved blocks of crystal-clear ice, I finally screamed. I screamed until my throat was raw, mourning the husband who never existed and the sisterhood that was a lie.

I lay there for hours as the sun went down and the studio turned into a blue-grey tomb. The cold seeped into my bones, but it didn't kill me. It numbed the pain. It froze the tears on my cheeks.

When I finally stood up, the shivering had stopped. I walked over to the workbench and picked up a V-chisel. The weight of it was familiar, grounding. I looked at the reflection in the polished steel blade. The naive heiress was gone. What stared back was something harder. Unbreakable.

I twisted my grandmother’s sapphire ring on my finger, the metal biting into my skin.

I pulled my phone from my pocket and dialed Marcus. He answered on the first ring.

"Athena?"

My voice was steady, devoid of heat, devoid of mercy.

"Initiate Protocol Zero," I said. "Cut the funding. Cut the PR. Cut the ghost-designers. Let them starve."

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