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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 2

The black town car pulled up to the Montgomery estate, its tires crunching on the gravel driveway. I watched through tinted windows as the familiar mansion came into view—imposing, pristine, and coldly beautiful in the afternoon sunlight. Five years. Five years since I'd last seen this place as Caroline Montgomery.

"Miss Montgomery, we've arrived," the driver announced, opening my door.

I stepped out, smoothing down my tailored Armani suit. No more thrift store finds or deliberate stains to maintain my gallery assistant disguise. My hair was styled in a sleek chignon, my makeup subtle but flawless. The transformation from Carol to Caroline was complete.

"Welcome home, Miss Caroline," the head housekeeper said, her eyes widening slightly as she took in my appearance. She'd known me before—before I became invisible to this household.

"Hello, Mrs. Winters," I replied, noting the flash of something in her expression. Satisfaction? Relief? "It's been a while."

"Indeed it has," she said, leading me through the grand entrance hall. "The staff... we've missed you."

As we crossed the marble foyer, I caught the subtle nods from longtime employees. The gardener who'd taught me to prune roses when I was twelve. The cook who'd made my favorite cakes when my mother was still alive. They remembered. And they resented how my father had treated his legitimate daughter.

The click of heels on the grand staircase announced Maria's arrival before I saw her. My half-sister descended like a vision in pale pink Chanel, her smile perfectly practiced.

"Caroline!" she exclaimed, arms outstretched. "What a wonderful surprise!"

She embraced me, her perfume overwhelming—expensive but tasteless, like everything Maria chose. Her grip was tight, her eyes calculating even as she smiled.

"We didn't expect you until dinner," she said, her voice honey-sweet. "Father is in his study."

"I'm sure he is," I replied, meeting her gaze steadily.

Maria's smile faltered for just a moment. She'd expected the meek, desperate-to-please Caroline who'd left five years ago. Instead, she found herself facing someone who'd learned to survive in worlds far more brutal than this mansion's politics.

My father didn't bother rising when I entered his study. He glanced up from his desk, where financial reports were spread like battle plans.

"Caroline," he acknowledged, his tone flat. "Your rebellious phase seems to be over."

"Rebellious phase?" I repeated, taking in his aging face—the lines deeper, the eyes more tired than I remembered.

"Five years of playing at being someone else," he said dismissively. "Maria has been handling things here quite capably."

Of course she had. Maria, who'd never shown interest in the business until I left.

"Where are my mother's things?" I asked, moving to the bookshelf where her photograph once stood. Empty space now.

"The past is settled," he replied coldly. "Your mother made her choices. As have you."

"And what choices would those be?" I asked, turning to face him.

"Focus on finding an appropriate marriage," he suggested, returning to his papers. "That's what girls like you should concern themselves with. Not... whatever it is you've been doing."

---

The restaurant Diana chose was discreet—a small Italian place in a forgotten corner of downtown, where businessmen came for private lunches and no one asked questions.

"You look different," Diana observed as I slid into the booth across from her. Her dark eyes missed nothing—she never had.

"I am different," I replied, accepting the glass of wine she'd ordered for me.

Diana Moretti had been my handler at the private military company for three years before I'd left to build my new life with Lucas. She was the one person who knew all my secrets.

"Rachel Gibson has been busy," she said, sliding a manila folder across the table. "Very busy."

I opened it, scanning the financial reports and surveillance photographs. "How long?"

"Three years," Diana replied. "She's positioned herself as indispensable to your father while systematically undermining the company's ethical practices. Several international deals have raised flags with regulatory agencies."

"And Maria?" I asked, though I already suspected the answer.

Diana's smile was grim. "Catastrophic. The Montgomery Foundation initiatives under her management have been failing spectacularly, covered up with falsified reports."

I closed the folder, my mind already processing the implications. "The company is more vulnerable than anyone realizes."

"Extremely," Diana confirmed. "Your father's judgment has deteriorated significantly. Rachel has him wrapped around her finger."

"And what do you suggest?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.

Diana leaned forward, her voice dropping to a whisper. "Take it back. All of it."

---

The gallery district hadn't changed much in my absence. Marcus Chen's space was still the most prestigious, his eye for emerging talent unmatched.

"Carol," he said warmly when I entered his private viewing room. "Or should I say Caroline now?"

"Caroline is fine," I replied, accepting his kiss on both cheeks.

"Everyone remembers you fondly," he said, gesturing to the current exhibition—a photographer whose career I'd helped launch when I was still "Carol." "Your eye was exceptional. You had a gift for identifying authentic talent."

"Thank you," I said, studying the photographs with genuine appreciation.

"By the way," Marcus added casually, "I heard about Lucas Allen. Quite the rising star at Yale, isn't he?"

My expression remained neutral. "I wouldn't know."

"Oh, of course," Marcus said, though his eyes held a knowing gleam. "He's been networking aggressively in academic circles. Very focused on his availability as a newly single professor."

I sipped my champagne slowly, letting the information settle. Lucas was already rewriting history, erasing our marriage as if I'd never existed.

"He'll regret that," I said quietly.

Marcus raised an eyebrow. "Will he?"

I met his gaze steadily. "Yes. He will."

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