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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 3

Six years of a marriage dismantled in twenty minutes.

I assembled the second cardboard box, pressing the packing tape flat against the seams.

"That’s everything," I muttered to the empty room.

I dropped my architectural sketchpad into the bottom. Next went three laminated VIP badges from Langston corporate retreats. My name was printed in a tiny, insignificant font beneath his: *Victor’s Spouse*.

I tossed the lanyards over the sketchpad.

A small wooden box holding my mother’s jewelry followed. Finally, I slid in the architecture firm acceptance letter I’d kept hidden in the back of my desk drawer for over half a decade.

My gaze drifted to the velvet-lined tray on the vanity.

A diamond tennis bracelet rested there. Beside it sat a pair of emerald earrings and the keys to a luxury sedan. I didn't touch them.

A quick search through the shared digital accounts this morning had revealed the truth about his grand romantic gestures. Natasha Weir’s private credit card had paid for every single one of those gifts.

"Keep your trophies," I whispered.

I hoisted the boxes into my arms and carried them down the grand staircase, setting them by the front door.

The heavy oak door swung inward before I could turn around.

Victor stepped onto the marble tiles. He shrugged off his suit jacket, stopping short when his expensive shoes bumped against the cardboard.

He stared at the boxes. He shifted his gaze to my face.

"Did you go through my files?" he asked.

Not *Where are you going?* Not *Why are you packing?*

"No," I said.

"You expect me to believe you're just organizing old clothes?" he snapped, stepping closer. "Tell me the truth, Serena."

"I haven't touched your office, Victor."

His jaw tightened. He didn't believe me. The panic in his eyes was vivid, entirely stripping away his usual polished demeanor.

He bypassed me without another word. His dress shoes thudded heavily against the hardwood stairs as he took them two at a time.

"Stay right there," he threw over his shoulder.

I didn't argue. I walked into the living room, took a seat on the edge of the velvet sofa, and checked my watch.

Twenty minutes passed in total silence.

Eventually, the heavy steel thud of the wall safe in his study locking shut echoed through the floorboards.

His footsteps descended the stairs. They were slower this time. Steady.

Victor entered the living room. The rigid panic in his shoulders had completely dissolved, replaced by his usual arrogant posture.

"Everything is exactly where I left it," he said.

"I told you the truth."

He walked over to the armchair opposite the sofa and sat down. He crossed his legs, leaning back with a heavy sigh.

"The terms in the agreement are fair, Serena," he said.

His tone dropped a fraction, adopting a practiced, reasonable cadence.

"My lawyers went over every line," he continued. "You walk away with enough to start over. It's clean."

"Clean," I repeated.

"We both know this marriage ran its course," he said, finally meeting my eyes. "Just sign the papers and let's move on."

I reached into my tote bag resting on the rug.

I pulled out the thick stack of legal paper he’d sent over via courier earlier today. I dropped it onto the glass coffee table between us.

"You brought them," he noted, a smug smile forming on his lips. "Good."

"I brought a pen, too," I said.

Instead of a pen, I pulled out a neon yellow highlighter.

Victor frowned. "What are you doing?"

"Let's talk about fair," I answered.

I uncapped the marker. The sharp squeak of the felt tip against paper echoed loudly in the quiet room. I drew a bright, thick line across section four, page twelve.

I closed the folder, spun the document around, and slid it across the glass.

"Read it," I instructed.

He leaned forward, his eyes scanning the highlighted text.

"The female party waives all rights to returns on joint marital investments registered under the Langston name," I read aloud for him.

"Standard boilerplate," Victor scoffed, waving a dismissive hand. "You didn't contribute capital to those investments. You have no claim to the returns."

"I didn't contribute cash," I corrected. "I contributed my name."

He froze. The smugness vanished from his features.

"What are you talking about?" he demanded.

"There are three guarantee contracts tied to the East District commercial project," I continued, keeping my voice perfectly level. "You signed them using my identity to bypass your corporate credit limits."

Victor stared at the yellow line. He didn't blink.

"I don't know what you think you found," he stammered.

"If I waive my right to the returns," I asked, tilting my head, "do the liabilities on those three guarantees transfer to you as well?"

Silence stretched between us, thick and suffocating.

Victor’s mouth opened, but no words came out. He stared at me like I was a stranger who had just broken into his house.

He had borrowed my name because I was a safe, invisible asset. He assumed I would sign the divorce papers without reading them. If I signed this, I would be legally responsible for millions in debt when his swamp-built project inevitably collapsed.

Transferring that liability now would require a full legal restructuring. It would alert his investors. It would ruin his merger.

"You read the addendums," he whispered.

"I read everything."

I stood up, capping the highlighter. I tossed it onto the papers.

"Your lawyers missed a massive loophole, Victor," I said, looking down at his pale face. "Or maybe they just thought I was too stupid to catch it."

He gripped the arms of his chair. "Serena, those guarantees are a formality."

"Then you won't mind taking them back."

I walked toward the foyer, grabbing the handle of the top box.

"Tell your lawyer to draft it again," I said, looking back at him. "I'll wait."

"You can't leave this unresolved!" he shouted, jumping to his feet.

"I'm not the one with a ticking clock," I said.

I opened the front door and stepped out into the night.

My phone buzzed in my pocket the second the door latched shut. I balanced the box on my hip and checked the screen.

It was a text from Cole Harrington.

*Check your email. We have a problem. Natasha didn't just take the deed.*

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