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When His Mistress Handed Me a Used Condom Novel Cover

When His Mistress Handed Me a Used Condom

The Hamptons sun felt like a spotlight, and I was center stage whether I wanted to be or not. I stepped out of the town car onto the manicured lawn of the Ashford estate, my Valentino heels sinking slightly into grass so perfect it looked painted. The birthday bash was already in full swing—crystal champagne flutes catching the light, string quartet competing with forced laughter, the usual theater of old money pretending to have fun. Every head turned. Not because I looked stunning—though I did, in a white silk slip dress that cost more than most people's cars—but because they were waiting for the show. Waiting to see if the Grant heiress would finally crack under the weight of her fiancé's very public humiliation. I gave them my mother's smile. The one that revealed nothing. Across the lawn, Cassius Hudson stood with his hand on Bonnie Lopez's lower back, fingers splayed possessively over the cheap fabric of her dress. He didn't even glance my way.
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Chapter 2

The Grant estate smelled like old money and fresh betrayal.

I sat in my father's study, still wearing yesterday's dress because I hadn't slept. The video had gone viral—three million views by dawn. #TiffanyBoxRevenge was trending. My phone had died from the notifications, which felt appropriate since I'd died a little too, watching Cassius's humiliation play on loop across every gossip site in Manhattan.

I'd expected my parents to be furious with him. With the Hudsons. With Bonnie Lopez and her grotesque little gift.

I hadn't expected them to be furious with me.

"A scene," my mother said, her voice sharp enough to cut glass. She stood by the window, backlit by morning sun, her posture rigid. "You caused a scene, Serena."

My father sat behind his mahogany desk, fingers steepled, his expression carved from stone. "In front of three hundred witnesses. With cameras."

"He gave me a used condom in a Tiffany box." My voice came out flat, empty. "Through his mistress. At a public event."

"And you should have handled it privately." My mother turned, and I saw something in her face I'd never seen before—fear. "You should have smiled, left quietly, and let us manage the situation through proper channels."

"Proper channels." I laughed, and the sound was wrong, jagged. "Like the proper channels that arranged this engagement? The ones that sold me to save a business deal?"

"Watch your tone." My father's voice dropped to that dangerous register that used to make me shrink. "You don't understand the complexities—"

"Then explain them."

Silence. Heavy and suffocating.

My mother moved to the sideboard, poured herself scotch though it wasn't yet nine. Her hands shook slightly. "The merger must proceed."

Something cold slithered down my spine. "What?"

"Grant Industries is overleveraged." My father's words came out clipped, clinical. "We've been operating on credit for eighteen months. The Hudson merger was supposed to provide the capital injection we need to—"

"You're broke." The realization hit like ice water. "You're using me as collateral."

"We're managing a temporary liquidity crisis," my mother corrected, but her eyes wouldn't meet mine. "The marriage ensures the merger proceeds. The merger ensures our survival. It's quite simple."

Simple. They'd sold me to save themselves, and now they expected me to smile through my fiancé's infidelity because their own house of cards was collapsing.

"I'm not marrying him."

"You are." My father stood, and I saw the desperation beneath his authority. "You will apologize to Cassius. You will proceed with the engagement. You will sign whatever agreements are necessary to make this work."

"Or?"

"Or we lose everything." My mother drained her scotch. "The estate, the company, the name. Everything your grandfather built. Everything we've protected."

"Everything you've squandered, you mean."

My father's face went red. "You ungrateful—"

"I'm done." I stood, smoothing my wrinkled dress. "I'll handle this myself."

"Serena—"

But I was already walking out, their protests fading behind me like smoke.

---

The reconciliation lunch happened at the Hudson townhouse, all dark wood and desperate grandeur. Eleanor Hudson greeted me with air kisses that smelled like Chanel and anxiety.

"Darling Serena. So glad we could clear up this unfortunate misunderstanding."

Misunderstanding. As if I'd misread a text, not been publicly humiliated by her son's used condom.

Cassius sat at the head of the table, his smile tight. "Serena. You look tired."

"Funny what betrayal does to one's complexion."

Eleanor laughed, brittle and bright. "Such spirit! Now, let's discuss the prenuptial agreement. Just a formality, really, to protect both families."

She slid the document across the table. Forty pages of legal text, dense and deliberately confusing. I scanned the first page, let my eyes glaze slightly, played the overwhelmed debutante.

"This is... a lot."

"Standard language," Cassius said, leaning back. "Basically says what's yours stays yours, what's mine stays mine."

Liar. I'd caught enough—clauses about shared liability, provisions that would give the Hudsons access to Grant family trusts, language that would make me responsible for Hudson Corporation's existing debts. They were trying to use me as a life raft while their ship sank.

"I'll need time to review—"

"Your father already approved it," Eleanor interrupted. "We just need your signature."

Of course he had. Sold me twice in one week.

I picked up the pen, let it hover over the signature line. Watched them lean forward, hungry and desperate.

Then I set it down.

"I'll have my lawyer look at it first. Just to be safe."

Cassius's jaw tightened. "I thought we were past the distrust phase."

"We are." I smiled my mother's smile. "I don't distrust you at all. I know exactly what you are."

---

The dive bar in Queens smelled like stale beer and salvation. Victoria Chen sat in the back booth, her sharp suit incongruous against the peeling vinyl.

"Serena Grant slumming it in Queens." She grinned. "Never thought I'd see the day."

I slid the prenup across the sticky table. "I need you to destroy them."

Victoria's grin widened as she read. "Oh, this is beautiful. They're not even trying to hide it. They're drowning and trying to pull you under."

"Can you counter it?"

"Counter it?" She looked up, eyes gleaming. "Honey, I can do better than that. How do you feel about hostile takeovers?"

I leaned forward. "Tell me everything."

And in that dim bar, over cheap whiskey and cheaper beer, Victoria Chen taught me how to burn down an empire.

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