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My Husband Blocked the Ambulance That Could Save My Father Novel Cover

My Husband Blocked the Ambulance That Could Save My Father

The Tiffany box in my hand felt heavy, a dense weight of expectation for a fifth anniversary that was supposed to fix everything. The penthouse was silent, the kind of expensive silence that only money can buy in Manhattan—thick, pressurized, and smelling faintly of sandalwood and cold air. I set my keys on the marble console, the click echoing too loudly in the foyer. "Graham?" My voice wavered. I cleared my throat, smoothing the silk of my dress. I needed to be perfect. Perfection was the only currency Graham accepted lately. A strange sound drifted from the study down the hall. Not the low hum of a business call, nor the clink of a scotch glass. It was a whimper.
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Chapter 3

The Greyhound bus smelled of diesel fumes and stale despair, a three-day purgatory that blurred the lines between the life I had fled and the void I was entering. By the time my boots hit the wet pavement of Seattle, my bones felt hollowed out. I had no name, no credit cards, and no reflection I recognized in the shop windows. I was just a ghost in a stolen housekeeper’s coat, haunting the sidewalk outside the glass monolith of AllenTech.

It was raining—a cold, relentless drizzle that soaked through the wool, chilling me to the marrow. I waited for four hours. Security guards eyed me with suspicion, hands hovering near their belts, but I didn't move. I was a statue made of ice and exhaustion.

Then, the revolving doors spun. Clayton Allen stepped out, flanked by assistants. He looked older than the boy I had left at the altar, his jawline sharper, his shoulders carrying the weight of an empire. He stopped mid-stride when he saw me. He didn't gasp. He didn't run to me. He simply stared, his grey eyes turning flinty and cold.

He signaled his security to stand down and walked over, stopping three feet away. The distance was a chasm of unsaid apologies and old wounds.

"You have a lot of nerve, Maeve," he said, his voice low and devoid of warmth. "If you're here for money, you're wasting my time."

My teeth chattered, but I forced my spine straight. "I don't want your money, Clayton. And I don't want your forgiveness."

He raised an eyebrow, checking his watch. "Then what?"

"I want to kill a kingdom," I rasped, the water dripping from my matted hair into my eyes. "I know how to destroy Lynch Enterprises. I have the codes. I have the secrets. I just need the weapon."

Something flickered in his gaze—not love, but interest. A predator recognizing another. Before he could answer, the world tilted sideways. The grey sky spun, and the concrete rushed up to meet me. The last thing I felt was not the hard impact, but strong arms catching me before I hit the ground.

***

I woke up to the smell of antiseptic and eucalyptus. I wasn't in a hospital, but a bedroom that looked out over the Puget Sound. For the next six months, this estate became my incubator.

My body healed faster than my mind. Dr. Elena Rodriguez, a trauma specialist with eyes that saw too much, visited daily. We talked about the panic room. The water. The ashes. But the nights were the battlefield. I would wake up screaming, the phantom sensation of a wet towel over my face suffocating me.

Clayton never entered my room without permission. He would sit in the hallway, his back against my door, reading poetry aloud until my breathing slowed. He offered presence, not pressure.

"*And I have known the eyes already, known them all—*" his deep voice would drift through the wood, anchoring me to reality. "*The eyes that fix you in a formulated phrase...*"

During the days, we didn't talk about the past. We talked strategy. In his library, surrounded by servers and screens, Clayton taught me the art of the corporate kill. Cybersecurity. Hostile takeovers. How to bleed a company dry without leaving fingerprints.

One evening, a thunderstorm rolled in off the Pacific. The crack of thunder sounded exactly like the *thud-click* of the panic room lock. I collapsed in the hallway, clawing at my throat, gasping for air that wouldn't come.

Clayton was there instantly. He didn't grab me. He sat cross-legged in front of me, holding his hands up, palms open.

"Look at me, Maeve. You aren't there. The door is open."

"He's coming," I choked, rocking back and forth. "He's going to put me back in the box."

"No one touches you unless you say so." He reached into his back pocket and pulled out a battered leather wallet. He flipped it open. Tucked behind his black Amex was a photo—me, at sixteen, laughing at a debutante ball. The edges were worn soft, as if touched a thousand times.

"I kept this to remember the girl who broke my heart," he said softly. "But she's gone. The woman in front of me is stronger than she ever was. You survived hell, Maeve. Don't let the weather beat you."

I stared at the photo, then at him. The realization hit me with the force of a physical blow: Graham had loved me as a possession; Clayton loved me as a person. Safety wasn't control. It was this.

That night, I walked into the bathroom. I picked up the shears. The blonde waves—Graham’s favorite feature—fell to the tile floor in heavy ribbons. I dyed what was left a sharp, ink-black. When I looked in the mirror, Maeve Lynch was dead. The woman staring back was ready for war.

***

"Are you sure?" Clayton asked. His fingers hovered over the keyboard in the command center.

"Do it," I said. My voice didn't waver.

We had found it deep in the legacy servers—the paper trail of Nicole’s embezzlement from the 90s, and the fraudulent accounting Graham used to cover it up. We didn't send it to the police. We sent it to the *Wall Street Journal*, encrypted and anonymous.

I watched the monitors. At 9:30 AM EST, the market opened. At 10:15 AM, the article went live.

*LYNCH ENTERPRISES: A DYNASTY BUILT ON FRAUD?*

The stock ticker for LYN turned red. It plummeted. Down five percent. Ten. Fifteen. Billions of dollars in market cap evaporated in minutes.

On the center screen, a news feed showed live footage from outside the Lynch tower in Manhattan. Graham was being escorted to a car, reporters swarming him like wasps. He looked haggard, his perfect suit rumpled. Suddenly, he lashed out, shoving a microphone into a reporter's face and swinging a wild fist at a board member trying to calm him.

"He's losing it," Clayton noted, a grim satisfaction in his tone. "He thinks you're dead, and now his empire is dying too."

I watched the man who had tortured me unravel in high definition. I felt a cold, jagged smile touch my lips.

"Let him bleed," I whispered. "This is just the first cut."

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