
My Husband’s Debt Made Me His Enemy’s Bride
My Husband’s Debt Made Me His Enemy’s Bride Chapter 1
The crystal chandelier in our Upper East Side penthouse cast fractured light across Brody's face as he delivered the words that would shatter my world.
"Wilder Hawkins wants collateral for the debt." His fingers drummed against the marble countertop, a staccato rhythm that matched my suddenly racing pulse. "He demanded Angela."
I steadied myself against the kitchen island, the cold stone biting into my palms. Wilder Hawkins. Even his name carried weight in Manhattan—the King of Wall Street, they called him. The man who destroyed competitors before breakfast and built empires by lunch. "Then send her."
Brody's laugh was sharp, bitter. "I can't do that, Catherine. Angela is—" He touched his watch, the Patek Philippe I'd given him for our third anniversary. "She's my future. You'll go instead."
The words hung in the air like smoke. Outside, the city glittered with a thousand oblivious lights.
"You're trading me." My voice came out steadier than I felt. "To a man the tabloids call a monster."
"It's temporary. Just until I restructure the company." He wouldn't meet my eyes. "Angela and I are getting married as soon as the paperwork clears."
The floor seemed to tilt beneath my feet, but I forced myself to stand straight. Five years of marriage, reduced to a business transaction.
I drove to my father's brownstone in Gramercy Park, my hands white-knuckled on the steering wheel. Dad would help. He had to help.
The sound of laughter spilled into the foyer before I even rang the bell. Through the window, I saw them—my father, my stepmother Victoria, and Angela, champagne flutes raised in celebration.
Victoria opened the door, her smile sharp as glass. "Catherine. We were just toasting Angela's engagement."
I pushed past her into the living room. "Dad, Brody wants to send me to Wilder Hawkins as collateral. You have to—"
"We know." My father set down his glass with deliberate care. "It's the right move, Catherine. For the family."
Angela lounged on the velvet sofa, her legs tucked beneath her like a satisfied cat. "Don't be so dramatic, Cath. It's just business."
"Business?" The word tasted like ash. "He's sending me to a man who—"
"Who will probably get bored and send you back in a few weeks." Victoria's voice dripped false sympathy. "Really, darling, you should be grateful Brody's giving you this opportunity to be useful."
The room spun. These people—my family—had already decided my fate over champagne and canapés.
"Where's Madden?" I turned toward the stairs. "I'm taking my son."
"Madden!" Angela's voice rang out, sweet as poisoned honey. "Your mom's here."
My seven-year-old appeared at the top of the stairs, clutching a new gaming console I'd never seen before. His face fell when he saw me.
"Come on, sweetheart. We're leaving."
"I don't want to go with you." He stepped back, his small voice cutting deeper than any blade. "You're boring. Aunt Angela says I can stay here and Dad's getting me a puppy and—"
"Madden—"
"I want to stay with Aunt Angela!" His shout echoed through the brownstone. "She's fun. You're just... you're just mean."
The silence that followed was absolute. My father looked away. Victoria smirked. Angela examined her manicure with studied disinterest.
I walked out without another word.
Two hours later, I returned to the penthouse with my lawyer, a woman whose retainer I'd paid from my mother's trust fund—the one thing they couldn't touch.
"Here's the deal." I placed the papers on Brody's desk. "I'll sign your collateral agreement. But first, you sign these divorce papers. Full severance of my personal assets. No alimony, no claims. We're done."
Brody's face went pale. "Catherine, you don't have to—"
"Sign it."
His hand trembled as he scrawled his signature. The sound of pen on paper felt like a door closing.
I signed the collateral agreement with steady hands, then reached for my wedding ring. The platinum band slid off easily—too easily, as if it had never really fit. I let it fall. It bounced once on the hardwood floor, spinning in a lazy circle before settling near Brody's feet.
"The car's waiting downstairs." My lawyer's voice was professional, distant.
I walked to the elevator, my heels clicking against marble. Behind me, I heard Brody call my name, but I didn't turn around. The doors slid shut on my old life.
The black SUV idled at the curb, sleek and ominous. A driver in a dark suit opened the door.
I climbed in, spine straight, chin high. If I was walking into the lion's den, I'd do it on my own terms.
The city blurred past the tinted windows as we drove toward whatever waited in Wilder Hawkins's world. I touched the locket at my throat—my mother's locket—and felt something cold and sharp crystallize in my chest.
They'd made me a sacrifice. But sacrifices, I was learning, could rise from the ashes.
My Husband’s Debt Made Me His Enemy’s Bride of Contents
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