
The Wife He Threw Away
Chapter 1
I thought finding my husband with another woman would be the worst moment of my life. I was wrong.
The worst moment came when she smiled at me—that triumphant, predatory smile—and announced she was carrying his child. The child I could never give him.
"Did you really think this marriage was anything but a business arrangement?" Katherine's words cut deeper than any blade. "You were just a breeding mare for the Wilson dynasty—and you couldn't even get that right."
The flash of cameras captured my humiliation for tomorrow's headlines. Three years as Mrs. James Wilson, reduced to nothing in an instant. Barren. Worthless. Discarded.
But they made one fatal mistake.
They underestimated me.
Six months later, I'm no longer the broken wife begging for scraps of affection. I'm sitting across from Alexander Sterling—the most dangerous man in corporate America—and he's offering me something far more intoxicating than love.
Revenge.
"The Wilsons destroyed everything I held dear," he says, his gray eyes burning with quiet fury. "Help me tear their empire apart, and I'll give you the power to rebuild yourself from their ashes."
One signature. One choice. One chance to make them pay.
But some alliances come with prices I never imagined...
...
The champagne tasted bitter in my mouth as I navigated through the glittering crowd at the Ritz-Carlton ballroom. The annual Wilson Foundation Charity Gala was in full swing—crystal chandeliers casting golden light over Manhattan's elite, the air thick with expensive perfume and whispered gossip.
I smoothed down the silk of my emerald gown—a dress that had cost more than my entire wardrobe before I became Mrs. James Wilson. Three years of marriage to one of New York's most eligible bachelors had taught me the price of everything and the value of nothing.
"Mrs. Wilson, you look absolutely radiant tonight," gushed Mrs. Harrington, her diamond earrings catching the light as she air-kissed my cheeks. "Though perhaps a touch thin? Still no happy announcement to make?"
The familiar sting of her words made me flinch internally. I maintained my practiced smile. "Not yet, Tiffany. Though James and I remain hopeful."
The lie slid easily from my lips after years of practice. What I couldn't say was how James had stopped visiting my bedroom months ago, how the fertility specialists had found nothing wrong with me despite Victoria's insistence that I was the problem.
"Well, dear, tick-tock," Tiffany trilled, patting my arm condescendingly. "Victoria must be simply desperate for an heir."
I excused myself, suddenly needing air. The grand hallway was quieter, and I took a deep breath, steadying myself against the ornate wall. James had disappeared nearly an hour ago—probably networking with potential investors, he'd claimed.
A feminine laugh echoed from behind a door left slightly ajar at the end of the hallway—suite 1242. Something about that laugh sent ice through my veins. I moved toward it without conscious thought, my heels silent against the plush carpet.
Pushing the door open wider, I froze.
James had Katherine Vance pressed against the wall, his hands tangled in her platinum blonde hair, their lips locked in passionate embrace. My husband's jacket was discarded on a nearby chair, Katherine's red dress hiked indecently high.
"James?" My voice sounded foreign to my own ears—small and broken.
They broke apart, but neither looked particularly startled. James merely looked annoyed at the interruption, while Katherine's perfectly painted lips curved into a triumphant smile.
"Emilia," James said flatly. "You should learn to knock."
The casual cruelty in his tone made something inside me crack. Three years of dutiful silence, of enduring Victoria's cutting remarks about my empty womb, of James's growing indifference—it all crystallized in that moment.
"This is what you've been doing while I've been subjected to endless fertility treatments?" My voice rose despite my efforts to maintain composure.
People were gathering in the doorway now, drawn by the commotion. I recognized faces from the gala—business associates, society friends, even a few reporters.
James straightened his tie, utterly unruffled. "Don't make a scene, Emilia. It's unbecoming."
"Unbecoming?" I laughed, the sound brittle even to my own ears. "What's unbecoming is finding my husband with his tongue down another woman's throat!"
Katherine stepped forward, her hand possessively on James's arm. "Oh, honey," she purred, "did you really think this marriage was anything but a business arrangement? You were just a breeding mare for the Wilson dynasty—and you couldn't even get that right."
Murmurs rippled through the growing crowd. I felt my face burn with humiliation.
"That's enough, Katherine," James said, though there was no real rebuke in his tone.
"Why stop now?" Katherine's eyes gleamed with malice. "Everyone should know that I'm twelve weeks pregnant with James's child—something his barren wife could never give him."
The gasps from the onlookers felt like physical blows. I staggered back, my vision blurring.
"Is this true?" I whispered to James.
He didn't even have the decency to look ashamed. "I want a divorce, Emilia. I've grown tired of this charade. Katherine gives me what you couldn't—passion, excitement, and now, an heir."
"You told me you loved me," I said, hating how pathetic I sounded.
James laughed coldly. "Love? You were a convenient merger, nothing more. A fertile womb with good breeding. But you've proven to be defective merchandise."
The room spun around me. Camera flashes popped in my peripheral vision—tomorrow's scandal captured for posterity. I backed away, my heel catching on the carpet. As I stumbled, I caught Victoria Wilson's gaze in the crowd, her eyes cold with satisfaction.
I turned and fled, tears blinding me as I pushed through the whispering crowd, their judgment following me like a shadow as my world collapsed into ruins around me.
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