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The CEO's Billion-Dollar Divorce Regret

The CEO's Billion-Dollar Divorce Regret

My husband, a mafia underboss and a brilliant neurosurgeon, left me to die on the side of a highway in the pouring rain. He had to rush to another woman, his true love, who'd had a minor car accident. As I lay bleeding on a gurney after being hit by a truck, I learned I was eight weeks pregnant. But my hope was short-lived. The hospital was out of my blood type, and the only reserve had been set aside by my husband for his lover, just in case she had "post-op complications" from her cosmetic procedure. Over the phone, I heard the nurse beg him. "This woman, and your... this baby will die!" His reply was ice. "Isabella is my priority." He let our child die to save her from a minor risk. The ledger where I'd been keeping score of his sins finally hit zero. I was free. Two years later, I've built a new life, a new career, and found a new love with a man who cherishes me. I'm no longer the broken wife, but a celebrated architect, nominated for a prestigious award. And tonight, at the awards ceremony, he found me. He got on his knees in the middle of the ballroom, begging for a second chance.
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Chapter 5

Seraphina POV: The airplane shattered the thick layer of clouds, and the cabin was flooded with a brilliant, almost violent, sunlight. I leaned my head against the cool glass of the window and felt a sensation I hadn't known in three years. Release. My new life was beginning. Dante POV: I jolted awake in Isabella's bed, a sharp, inexplicable pain seizing my chest. It felt like my ribs were cracking, my heart being squeezed by an invisible fist. "Seraphina," I whispered, the name escaping my lips before I was even fully conscious. A sudden, cold panic washed over me-primal and overwhelming. I needed to go home. I needed to see her. Now. "Dante? What's wrong?" Isabella murmured, stirring beside me. I ignored her. I threw on my clothes, my hands shaking, and grabbed my keys. "Where are you going?" she called after me, her voice laced with irritation. "I thought we were having breakfast." I didn't answer. I drove home at a reckless speed, my mind a chaotic storm of unease. The feeling that something was terribly, fundamentally wrong grew with every mile. I burst through the front door, the sound echoing in the unnatural silence of the house. "Seraphina!" I called out. Nothing. I ran through the rooms, my heart pounding against my ribs. Her office was tidy, her drafting table clear. I threw open the doors to our walk-in closet. Her side was empty. The neat rows of shoes, the colorful silks, the scent of her perfume that always lingered in the air-all gone. It was a gaping wound in the heart of our home. My phone rang. It was the housekeeper, Maria. "Mr. Santos, is everything alright?" "Where is she, Maria?" I demanded, my voice tight. "Where is Seraphina?" "I... I don't know, sir," she stammered. "The movers came yesterday." Before I could process that, my other line buzzed. Isabella. I clicked over. "She was here," Isabella said, her voice a hysterical whisper. "She came to my apartment while you were sleeping. She told me... she told me if I didn't leave you, she would ruin me. She said I stole you from her." The words, the lie, slotted into the confusion and panic in my head. It made a sick kind of sense. A jealous wife, pushed too far. In my fractured state, it was the easiest narrative to grasp. "Maria," I said, switching back to the housekeeper's call, my voice cold with anger. "When you hear from my wife, you tell her she owes Isabella an apology." I hung up and stormed out of the house, heading back to Isabella's. But as I drove, a deep, gnawing unease about Seraphina's disappearance settled in my gut. It didn't feel right. I got to Isabella's apartment and saw the show she was putting on-the shimmering tears that never fell, the dramatic performance. For the first time, it didn't stir my protective instincts. It just felt... hollow. I had no time for this. An overwhelming urge pulled at me, telling me to go home, to wait for Seraphina, to prove this gnawing fear in my gut wrong. I looked at the woman I thought I loved, the woman I had just wrecked my home for, and realized I was looking at a stranger. And the woman I had ignored, the woman I had taken for granted, was the only one I wanted to see.