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The Charity Wife He Discarded Came Back as His Ruin Novel Cover

The Charity Wife He Discarded Came Back as His Ruin

On the morning Victor Langston signed the divorce papers without reading them, Serena Vale was already three steps ahead. For six years she cooked his meals, raised his profile, and buried her own architecture degree in a drawer—while he paraded Natasha Weir through every room Serena had decorated. The day he handed her a settlement check and told her to be grateful, she signed it, smiled, and walked into the office of Cole Harrington, the rival tycoon the Langston family feared most. Three years later, Victor stood at a groundbreaking ceremony to beg Harrington Group for a lifeline. The project director who walked out to meet him was his ex-wife—carrying blueprints, a new last name, and zero interest in his apology.
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Chapter 2

"Sit," Cole ordered. "We have a lot of ground to cover."

I took the chair at the opposite end of the long mahogany table. The distance between us felt intentional. A test.

He slid a cream-colored folder across the polished wood. It stopped exactly in the middle.

"The Langston internal project evaluation you brought," Cole said. His voice echoed slightly in the massive glass-walled room. "I read it. Now, I want to hear you pitch it."

I stared at the cover. A tiny, hand-drawn star sat in the top right corner. My mark.

"You knew," I said, ignoring his command for a second. "Nine months ago. You knew I was the one who sent the anonymous analysis."

"I don't play guessing games," Cole said. His tone was gravelly, hardened by years of corporate warfare. "I tracked the IP address. I checked the architectural license tied to the software. You've been sitting on a structural disaster while baking casseroles. Why bring this to me now?"

"Because baking casseroles didn't stop my husband from giving my life away to someone else," I said. "And I refuse to let him keep my work."

"Then prove it's yours." He gestured to the glass board behind me.

I stood up. I grabbed a black marker from the tray. The cool plastic felt foreign in my grip after so many years of holding spatulas and steaming irons.

"The East District commercial plot," I began, drawing a rapid, scaled map on the glass. "Victor's crown jewel. He's marketing it as a luxury retail and residential hybrid."

"A billion-dollar development," Cole noted.

"A billion-dollar sinkhole," I corrected. "The soil composition reports he filed with the city zoning board are doctored."

Cole leaned forward, resting his elbows on the table. "That's a heavy accusation."

"It's a fact," I said. "Look at the water table data from the adjacent municipal park." I tapped the board with the marker. "The underground aquifer shifts during heavy rainfall. Victor’s foundation plans rely on standard reinforced concrete. In five years, the subterranean parking structures will flood. In ten, the residential towers will experience micro-fractures in the load-bearing columns."

"He's building on a swamp."

"He's building a massive liability," I said. "My rezoning strategy shifts the residential towers to the north quadrant. The bedrock there is stable. Convert the southern flood zone into an eco-terraced commercial plaza. It absorbs the water table instead of fighting it."

I talked for forty minutes. I broke down zoning laws, material stress limits, and load distribution. I didn't mention Victor’s stolen internal files once. I dismantled his empire using only my own brain.

When I finished, I capped the marker. The sharp snap echoed loudly.

Cole stared at the board. He didn't move. He didn't speak.

"Well?" I asked.

"What do you want?" he asked.

"A salaried position," I said, walking back to the table. "Lead architect on your competing bid. Full credit for the rezoning plan."

"You haven't worked in the industry for six years," Cole challenged.

"I haven't been paid in six years," I corrected. "I never stopped working."

"And?"

"And a three-month buffer," I demanded. "Ninety days of absolute secrecy before the Langston family finds out I'm inside your building."

"You're asking me to fund a ghost," Cole said. "Three months is a long time to hide a lead architect on a project this massive."

"If Victor knows I'm here, he'll tie up your bid in frivolous non-compete litigation," I countered. "He'll claim I stole trade secrets. Keep me hidden, and by the time he realizes what hit him, the city council will have already approved your permits."

Cole held my gaze. One. Two. Three seconds ticked by.

He opened a leather portfolio, pulled out a silver pen, and signed the bottom of an intent document. He pushed it toward me.

"Welcome to the firm, Serena."

***

The afternoon sun cast long, sharp shadows across the driveway as I pulled up to the Langston mansion. The house looked exactly the same, yet entirely foreign.

I unlocked the front door and stepped into the foyer.

"Mrs. Langston?"

Donna Reyes stood by the kitchen island. She wrung a dish towel between her hands. Her eyes darted toward the stairs, then back to me.

"It's just Serena," I said, dropping my keys on the counter.

She extended a thick manila envelope. "A courier dropped this off an hour ago. He said it was from Mr. Langston's attorney."

I took it. The flap was unsealed. I pulled out the heavy stack of legal paper.

*Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.*

A yellow sticky note clung to the front page. Victor’s aggressive handwriting slashed across it: *Sign within seven days. Don't make this difficult.*

A dry laugh escaped my throat. I shoved the papers into my tote bag.

"Is there something else, Donna?" I asked. She hadn't moved.

She bit her bottom lip. "Natasha Weir was here this morning."

My jaw tightened. "While I was out?"

"Yes," Donna whispered. "She let herself in. She used the master security code."

"What did she want?"

"She went upstairs. To the master bedroom." Donna swallowed hard. "She brought a tape measure."

"A tape measure," I repeated.

"She measured the windows. She told me the current drapes block too much morning light. She prefers sheer linen."

I stared at the housekeeper. Victor was redecorating my cage for his new bird before I had even packed my bags.

"She also asked about the art," Donna added, her voice trembling. "The painting in the dining room. She said it was entirely too depressing for a bridal luncheon."

"Bridal luncheon," I echoed. The words tasted like ash.

"She asked which side of the closet you used," Donna said. "She wanted to know how much space to clear out. I'm sorry, Ma'am. I didn't know what to say to her."

"You say nothing," I instructed. "You let her measure whatever she wants."

"Should I start prepping dinner?" she asked, looking miserable.

"No." I pulled my checkbook from my purse. I wrote a sum that covered her next three months of wages. I handed it to her.

"Ma'am?" she asked, staring at the numbers.

"You don't need to come in tomorrow," I told her.

Panic flashed across her face. "Did I do something wrong? Please, I need this job—"

"You did nothing wrong," I interrupted. "But this job is over. The house is being sold. Take the money, Donna. Don't answer any calls from Victor."

She clutched the check and hurried out the back door.

The house fell completely silent.

I walked to the kitchen island. The heavy leather cookbook sat exactly where I left it.

I lifted the cover.

The space beneath it was empty. The brown envelope containing the deed to my family estate was gone.

My phone buzzed in my pocket.

*Victor: I’m stopping by tonight. Have my study unlocked. We need to talk about your signature.*

I stared at the screen. A cold smile stretched across my face.

He wanted a signature. He was going to get a war.

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