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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 4

The library at the Richardson estate was a fortress of mahogany and leather, smelling of old paper and the sharp tang of espresso. Marcus sat across from me, his usually immaculate tie loosened, surrounded by stacks of financial records that detailed the rot beneath Bennett’s polished exterior.

“It’s not just incompetence, Athena,” Marcus said, sliding a spreadsheet across the desk. “It’s criminal. Look at the Cruz Foundation ledger.”

I picked up the document. The numbers were neat, orderly rows of deceit. *Donation: $250,000 from Vandelay Development. Purchase: ‘Abstract Study No. 4’ for corporate lobby.*

“‘Abstract Study No. 4’ doesn’t exist,” I said, my voice flat. “I cataloged every piece he ever claimed to make. That was a pile of scrap metal he threw out three months ago.”

“Exactly,” Marcus replied, tapping the paper. “He’s washing bribe money for developers who need zoning variances. They buy non-existent art at inflated prices, Bennett keeps a cut, and the rest gets funneled back as ‘consulting fees.’ It’s classic money laundering.”

I felt a cold smile touch my lips. It wasn't joy; it was the satisfaction of a hunter finding the blood trail. Bennett wasn’t just a fraud; he was a felon. This wasn't just about a broken heart anymore. This was federal prison.

“Do we release it?” Marcus asked, his hand hovering over the phone.

“No,” I said, closing the folder. “Not yet. If we release it now, he claims ignorance. He blames his accountants. He plays the victim. I need him on a stage so big that when he falls, the shockwave shatters him completely.”

I stood up and walked to the window. The Atlantic was churning, grey and violent. “We need to get him to Aspen.”

The Aspen Winter Gala. It was the premier event of the season, a high-society convergence of art, money, and ego. The highlight was the Ice Sculpting Competition—a brutal, timed event where artists carved massive blocks of ice in freezing conditions. It required stamina, technical mastery, and nerves of steel. Bennett had none of those things.

“He’s broke, Marcus,” I said, watching the waves crash. “He’s desperate. He needs a win, and he needs cash. The Gala prize is half a million dollars.”

“He’ll never qualify on his own,” Marcus noted.

“He won’t have to. I’ll make sure he gets an invitation through a proxy. A ‘special consideration’ for the rising star Bennett Cruz.” I turned back to him. “Call the organizers. Tell them an anonymous donor is sponsoring a slot, but only if they invite Bennett. And make sure the invitation emphasizes the prize money.”

***

Two days later, the trap was set. I watched the feed from the penthouse security cameras. Bennett was pacing the living room, holding the heavy cream envelope with the Aspen seal. Joelle was sitting on the sofa, scrolling through her phone, looking bored and anxious.

“Five hundred thousand,” Bennett muttered, his eyes gleaming with that dangerous mix of greed and delusion. “This is it, Joelle. This is the lifeline. If I win this, the commissions come back. The investors come back.”

“But you haven’t sculpted ice in two years,” Joelle said, her voice shrill. “Athena always did the heavy lifting for the winter shows. You just stood there for the photos.”

“I watched her!” Bennett snapped. “I know the techniques. It’s just water and temperature. How hard can it be? Besides, I’m a visionary. The medium doesn’t matter.”

He was already rewriting history in his head, convincing himself that my talent was actually his own latent genius waiting to emerge. It was pathetic. It was perfect.

“But what are you going to carve?” Joelle asked. “You don’t have a design.”

Bennett froze. His eyes darted around the room, landing on the door to his studio. “I need her old sketchbooks. She kept everything.”

I leaned closer to the screen. *Go on,* I thought. *Take the bait.*

I knew exactly where he would go. He wouldn’t find anything in the penthouse; I had cleared it out weeks ago. But there was a storage unit in Chelsea, a climate-controlled vault where I kept my rejects and early drafts. I had left the key in the top drawer of his desk, hidden under a false bottom—just hard enough to find that he would think he was clever for discovering it.

And inside that unit, sitting right on top of a box marked *'Drafts - Do Not Use'*, was a single sketch.

Later that night, the notification pinged on my phone: *Access Granted: Unit 404.*

I switched the feed to the storage unit camera. The grain was rougher here, black and white in the low light. Bennett fumbled with the flashlight on his phone, tearing through boxes with frantic, jerky movements. He was sweating despite the cool air.

“Come on, come on,” he hissed, tossing aside my intricate charcoal studies of anatomy.

Then he stopped. He pulled out the large sketch pad I had planted. He flipped it open to the marked page.

It was a drawing of a Seraphim—a six-winged angel, geometric and terrifyingly beautiful. The wings were impossibly thin, defying gravity, spiraling upward in a delicate lattice of ice. It was breathtaking.

It was also structurally impossible.

I had designed it years ago as a theoretical exercise in failure points. The weight distribution of the upper wings would shatter the base if the ice wasn't tempered with a specific localized heating technique known only to the Richardson family. Without that secret, the moment the temperature fluctuated by even a degree, the entire sculpture would explode from internal stress.

Bennett stared at the drawing, tracing the lines with a trembling finger. “This is it,” he whispered, a predatory grin spreading across his face. “The Seraphim. It’s perfect.”

He didn’t see the trap. He only saw the glory. He ripped the page out of the book, stuffed it into his jacket, and hurried out of the unit.

I sat back in my chair, the silence of the estate wrapping around me. He had the design. He had the invitation. He had the arrogance.

Now, all he needed was the ice.

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