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Scorned Wife Wins Empire Novel Cover

Scorned Wife Wins Empire

I stood in my modest apartment, divorce papers clutched in my hand, the courier's envelope still on the floor where I'd dropped it. The timing couldn't have been more perfect—or more cruel. Today, Lucas had accepted his Yale professorship. Today, he'd sent me these. "A nobody gallery girl isn't worthy of an Ivy League professor." The words stared back at me from the legal document, cold and clinical. Five years of marriage reduced to a single sentence. I traced my finger over the typewritten line, feeling the slight indentation on the paper. How long had he been planning this? How many nights had he lain beside me, plotting his escape? I moved through the apartment, touching the cheap furniture I'd carefully selected to maintain my disguise.
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Chapter 1

I stood in my modest apartment, divorce papers clutched in my hand, the courier's envelope still on the floor where I'd dropped it. The timing couldn't have been more perfect—or more cruel. Today, Lucas had accepted his Yale professorship. Today, he'd sent me these.

"A nobody gallery girl isn't worthy of an Ivy League professor."

The words stared back at me from the legal document, cold and clinical. Five years of marriage reduced to a single sentence. I traced my finger over the typewritten line, feeling the slight indentation on the paper. How long had he been planning this? How many nights had he lain beside me, plotting his escape?

I moved through the apartment, touching the cheap furniture I'd carefully selected to maintain my disguise. The secondhand dishes in the kitchen cabinet. The thrift store clothing hanging in the closet. All of it part of my performance as Carol—the struggling gallery assistant who needed her husband's support.

What would Lucas say if he knew? That his "nobody gallery girl" had financed his entire Harvard education? That every research grant, every conference trip, every expensive textbook had come from my hidden accounts?

I sat at our small dining table—a $50 find from a garage sale—and methodically worked through the papers. Lucas's attorney had been efficient, dividing our minimal joint assets with surgical precision. The apartment would be mine—not that I wanted it anymore. The few pieces of furniture would be split. Our shared bank account, containing less than $2,000, would be emptied and closed.

Not once did the documents acknowledge the real source of Lucas's success. Not once did they mention the late-night calls to Switzerland that had secured his funding. Not once did they hint at the woman who had burned her own bridges to build his future.

"He couldn't even face me," I whispered to the empty room.

The knock at the door came just as I finished reading. Aggressive. Insistent. I knew who it was before I opened it.

"Caroline," Lucas's mother announced herself, pushing past me without waiting for an invitation. "I need to make sure you understand the situation."

She looked different than I remembered—her usual veneer of middle-class respectability gone. Her eyes darted around the apartment with undisguised contempt.

"This is what you've been holding him back with," she said, gesturing dismissively at our home. "Do you have any idea what Lucas could have accomplished if he hadn't been dragged down by your... circumstances?"

I remained silent, watching as she circled me like a predator.

"You were a parasite," she continued, her voice gaining strength with each word. "You trapped him during his vulnerable student years. A real partner would have elevated him, not kept him in this..." She gestured again, unable to find words despicable enough for our modest life.

"Lucas deserves better than someone who works at a gallery," she spat. "Someone who can't even afford proper furniture."

I started to respond, but she cut me off with a jab of her finger toward my face.

"Sign the papers today," she demanded, moving closer. "Disappear from his life completely. Girls like you should know your place."

Her hand reached for the documents on the table, but as she leaned forward, something in me shifted. Years of military training took over. I caught her wrist with surgical precision, redirecting her momentum in one fluid motion.

The look of shock on her face was almost comical as she found herself suddenly immobilized, my forearm against her throat.

"Don't touch me," I said quietly.

She fled, the door slamming behind her, leaving me alone with the ruins of my marriage.

I worked through the night, methodically destroying every trace of Carol. In the metal sink, I built a small fire—illegal in the apartment, but I no longer cared about such petty rules.

One by one, I fed the flames: photographs of Lucas at his graduation, standing proudly beside me; donation receipts carefully preserved in folders; the modest clothing that had maintained my disguise for five years.

My fingers hesitated over the cheap wedding band from our courthouse ceremony. I'd paid for it with cash from my gallery assistant salary, though my real accounts could have bought us a mansion.

"Enough," I whispered, dropping it into the flames.

As the fire consumed my past, I made calls on my encrypted phone—reactivating my security team, contacting my military company handlers, alerting my art world network that Carol was finished.

When dawn broke over the city, I stood in the empty apartment with a single bag containing the few items worth keeping.

I placed one final call to the Montgomery estate.

"Hello?" The housekeeper's voice was hesitant.

"Tell my father," I said, my voice steady and clear, "that Caroline Montgomery is coming home."

I hung up, placed the apartment keys on the counter, and walked out without looking back.

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