
Spoiled By My Overprotective Brothers
Chapter 1
The chandeliers of the Hale Corporation’s anniversary gala glistened like frozen stars, casting sharp light over silk gowns and black tuxedos. Liana stood at the edge of the hall, champagne flute in hand, her back straight despite the whispers pricking her from every corner. She had learned to endure humiliation in silence. It had become her armor.
Her husband, Victor Hale, strode across the marble stage like he owned not just the building, but the entire city. He was tall, immaculately dressed, with the kind of smile that charmed investors and shattered hearts. For three years, she had called him her husband. For three years, she had convinced herself that enduring coldness and neglect was still better than returning to the empty loneliness she had known before him.
Tonight would destroy that illusion once and for all.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” Victor’s voice rolled like thunder, amplified by the hall’s perfect acoustics, “thank you for joining us on this milestone. Hale Corporation wouldn’t be standing without the brilliance, the dedication, and—” he paused for effect, glancing toward the side of the stage, “—the inspiration of one extraordinary woman.”
A murmur spread through the crowd. Liana felt her fingers tighten around the stem of her glass. Her heart wanted to hope, to believe that maybe for once he would acknowledge her, the wife who had worked in the shadows, who had polished his speeches, managed the details he never cared to notice. Maybe tonight, he would finally let the world know she was more than just a ghost at his side.
Victor extended his hand. A figure in crimson silk emerged from behind the curtains. Miranda Cross.
The room erupted in applause.
“Miranda,” Victor said, pulling her close, “is the reason I’ve been able to push through the darkest days. She is my muse, my strength, my… first love.”
The applause turned into gasps, then laughter, the ugly kind that comes from those who smell scandal and savor it.
Liana’s world tilted. The glass in her hand trembled, threatening to shatter. But her face—her face remained calm, porcelain smooth. Years of being ignored had trained her well.
In that moment, she realized the truth: this was no slip of the tongue. Victor hadn’t just humiliated her—he had erased her.
Miranda, basking in the spotlight, leaned into the microphone with a coy smile. “Victor and I… well, fate always finds a way, doesn’t it?”
The crowd tittered approvingly.
From the corner of her eye, Liana noticed three men standing apart from the rest, near the hall’s towering glass doors. They weren’t clapping. They weren’t even smiling. Their gazes were fixed on her—not Victor, not Miranda, her. One’s jaw was tight, another’s hand flexed as if restraining violence, and the third’s expression was unreadable, masked behind a cool detachment that somehow burned hotter than rage.
Liana turned away before she could wonder who they were. She would not let strangers witness her fall.
Victor continued to bask in his moment, oblivious to the woman who had quietly stepped down from the stage of his life.
She placed her champagne flute on a passing tray and walked toward the exit, her heels clicking like gunshots against marble. With every step, she replayed the words in her head: muse, strength, first love. Not once had she been called his anything.
The whispers followed her, daggers in silk.
“Isn’t that his wife?”
“Wife? More like decoration.”
“She should be grateful he tolerated her this long.”
Her chest burned, but she refused to bow her head.
At the entrance, a hand brushed the door handle before she could reach it. One of the three men—the one with cold, storm-gray eyes—pulled the door open for her. For a second, their gazes locked. He didn’t smirk like the others inside, didn’t pity her either. His eyes carried weight, recognition almost.
Liana stepped through without a word. She didn’t owe anyone explanations—not anymore.
Outside, the night air bit against her skin. She inhaled sharply, filling her lungs with something cleaner than the suffocating perfume of betrayal.
She pulled her phone from her clutch. Her hands shook, but not from weakness. From clarity.
Enough.
She dialed her lawyer. Her voice was steady, each word a blade cutting the last ties that bound her.
“Prepare the divorce papers. I want them on Victor Hale’s desk tomorrow morning.”
The lawyer stammered a surprised reply, but she ended the call before doubt could creep in.
For the first time in three years, Liana smiled—not with joy, but with the quiet, dangerous certainty of a woman who had finally woken up.
Inside the gala, Victor lifted a glass of champagne with Miranda at his side, unaware that his empire had already begun to crumble.
And on the edge of the crowd, those same three men watched the door she had walked through.
One of them, the tallest, murmured just loud enough for the others to hear:
“She’s finally decided. It’s time we bring her home.”
You may also like





