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The Billionaire's Secret Triplets: Mom's Revenge Novel Cover

The Billionaire's Secret Triplets: Mom's Revenge

Six years ago, I was a naive girl sold by my father to the powerful Sanders estate, only to be tossed onto the streets after a brutal assault they labeled "marital infidelity." I fled the country pregnant and broken, hiding from the shadow of a husband I had never even met. Now, I've returned to New York with my triplets to sign the final divorce papers and disappear forever. But Archibald Sanders-the man I was told was a crippled recluse-intercepted us with the cold precision of a predator. He didn't see the woman his family destroyed; he saw a gold-digger who had shamed his name. His security team hunted us to a grimy motel, using tactical force to snatch my children away and drag me to his glass-walled empire. In his office, he loomed over me, demanding a DNA test and threatening to throw me in prison while my babies were lost to the foster system. He was convinced I'd cheated, yet he stared at my sons with a haunting confusion, unable to ignore the stormy blue eyes that were a perfect mirror of his own. I stood there, paralyzed by his scent-the sharp tang of rain and expensive leather that triggered the icy dread of my worst nightmares. How could he accuse me of betrayal when he felt exactly like the monster who had shattered my life in that dark hotel room? "I'll sign anything," I sobbed, "just give me my kids." But the game changed when my five-year-old son hacked the tower's security, holding the skyscraper hostage to save me. In the chaos, a fragile, silent boy-Archibald's secret son-wandered into the room and reached for me as if I were his missing soul. Archibald's face turned to stone as he tore up the agreement and locked the doors. "Until I find out why my son is looking at you like that," he growled, "you aren't going anywhere."
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Chapter 2

Archibald Sanders stood at the floor-to-ceiling window of his office on the eighty-eighth floor of Sanders Tower. Below him, Manhattan was a grid of gray concrete and yellow taxis, looking like a toy set he could crush with a single step.

He rubbed his left shoulder.

It was a subconscious habit. The scar there had faded to a jagged white line over the last six years, but on rainy days, it still throbbed with a phantom ache. A reminder of the only night he had ever felt alive.

And the night he had lost her.

Sir?

The voice came from the doorway. Archibald didn't turn around. He kept his eyes fixed on the horizon, his reflection in the glass showing a man who looked nothing like the rumors.

The tabloids said Archibald Sanders was a cripple, a phantom of the opera hiding a hideous deformity. It was a lie carefully cultivated by his grandfather, Hilliard, to protect him during the turbulent years of the corporate takeover.

In reality, Archibald was six-foot-three, broad-shouldered, and perfectly healthy. His face was sharp, defined by a jawline that could cut glass and eyes the color of a stormy sea.

Speak, Casimiro, Archibald commanded, his voice deep and devoid of warmth.

Casimiro Wynn, his personal assistant and head of security, stepped into the room. He held a tablet as if it were a live grenade.

We have a flag from the port authority's system, Casimiro said, hesitating. "An old travel document linked to the Sanders estate was just scanned at a customs checkpoint."

Archibald stiffened. The association tasted like bile in his mouth.

Annelise Parker. His ex-wife. The woman he had never met face-to-face, the woman who had married him for his money and then slept around while he was supposedly incapacitated.

What about her? Archibald asked, turning slowly.

She just landed at JFK. Flight 209 from London.

Archibald's eyes narrowed. "She has some nerve returning here. The expulsion order was clear. If she steps foot in New York, she forfeits the settlement."

She didn't take the settlement, sir, Casimiro reminded him gently. "She refused the money six years ago."

Because she knew she was guilty, Archibald scoffed. He walked to his desk, a slab of black marble that cost more than most people's homes. "She's probably back to beg for more. Or maybe she's spent whatever she made from selling her story to the rags."

He hated her. He hated her with a passion that burned almost as hot as his obsession with the other woman.

The Angel.

That's what he called the woman from the hotel room. The blackout at the Hilton. The drugs his enemies had slipped into his drink that made him lose his mind. He remembered stumbling into the wrong room. He remembered the darkness. He remembered a woman's soft body, her scent of vanilla and rain, the way she had trembled beneath him.

He had hurt her. He knew that. The drugs had made him aggressive, primal. But he also remembered her hands on his shoulders, the way she had cried out.

He had spent millions trying to find her. He needed to apologize. He needed to know if she was the mother of the child he was raising.

Darien.

His son was five years old now. A beautiful, broken boy who screamed if anyone touched him and spent hours staring at dust motes in the sunlight. The DNA test had confirmed Darien was his. The boy had been found abandoned at a fire station with a note almost a year after that blackout night at the Hilton. The timeline matched perfectly with a full-term pregnancy.

But who was the mother? Archibald's grandfather, Hilliard, had presented him with a devastating dossier. It contained supposedly verified medical records showing that Annelise Parker—the woman Archibald had been forced to marry on paper—had birthed the child in secret in Europe. According to Hilliard’s files, she had taken a massive covert payout from a rival family, embezzled from the Sanders trust, and discarded the boy at the fire station when he became an inconvenience to her new, wealthy lifestyle.

Archibald's jaw tightened. He wanted to believe the Angel from the dark room was Darien's mother, a victim of circumstance. But the forged paperwork pointed directly to Annelise Parker, the gold-digger who had abandoned his flesh and blood while he was suffering.

Intercept her, Archibald said coldly. "Send a team to customs. I want her escorted to a holding room. Have the final dissolution papers ready. I want her signature, and then I want her on the next flight out of my city."

Yes, sir. And... there is one more thing. Casimiro swiped on the tablet. "The manifest lists dependents traveling with her. The initial report is unclear on the number."

Archibald paused. "Dependents?"

His lip curled in disgust. "Children? She was busy spending the money she stole from us, wasn't she? Probably dragging her new brood back to look for a payout."

His phone buzzed on the desk. The screen lit up with a picture of a smiling brunette. Jenelle Santiago.

Archibald sighed, the sound heavy with irritation. Jenelle was useful. Her family owned the shipping lanes he needed, and the press loved her. She claimed to be the one who found him that morning in the hotel, the one who called the ambulance.

He picked up the phone. "What is it, Jenelle?"

Archie, darling! Her voice was shrill, grating against his nerves. "Where are you? You promised to pick me up! The press is already here at JFK, and I look like a fool standing alone with my luggage."

Archibald pinched the bridge of his nose. He had forgotten. "I'm on my way."

You better be. And bring the Rolls. The Phantom. It looks better in photos.

Fine.

He hung up and grabbed his jacket from the back of the chair.

Change of plans, Archibald muttered to Casimiro. "I'll handle the Parker woman myself after I deal with Jenelle. I don't want to be in the same terminal as that woman, but this is a convenient coincidence. Have the team hold her until I give the signal. I'll observe from the car."

He strode to the elevator, his long legs eating up the distance. The doors slid open, revealing his reflection in the polished brass.

He adjusted his collar. He looked impeccable. Powerful. Untouchable.

But as the elevator plummeted toward the ground floor, Archibald reached up and touched his shoulder again. The bite mark there-a scar left by a woman's teeth-tingled.

Why did he feel this sudden, overwhelming sense of dread?

Sir, the car is ready, Casimiro said into his earpiece.

Archibald stepped out into the lobby, his security detail flanking him instantly. The convoy of black SUVs and the flagship Rolls Royce Phantom waited at the curb.

He slid into the back of the Phantom, the leather smelling rich and new.

JFK, he ordered the driver. "And step on it."

As the car merged into traffic, Archibald looked out at the city. He was going to end this. He would force Annelise Parker to sign the papers, banish her from his life forever, and then go back to searching for his Angel.

He had a tablet in his hand, ready to connect to Casimiro's live feed. He would watch this pathetic reunion from a distance, a king observing the squabbles in his courtyard.

He had no idea that he was speeding toward a collision that would shatter his reality.

Annelise stood in the customs line, her heart pounding against her ribs. The officer in the booth was frowning at her passport. He typed something into his computer, stopped, frowned again, and typed more.

Is there a problem? Annelise asked, trying to keep her voice steady.

The officer didn't look up. "Just a system lag, ma'am. Please wait."

But Annelise saw his hand move under the desk. He pressed a button. A silent alarm.

She pulled the triplets closer, her protective instincts flaring.

Mom? Blace tugged on her sleeve. "That man is looking at us funny."

I know, Annelise whispered. "Stay close."

She didn't know Archibald was coming. She didn't know she was minutes away from facing the man she hated most in the world. All she knew was that the trap was closing.

---

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