
Wife Ends Hamilton Empire
Chapter 1
The elevator doors slid open to the forty-eighth floor of our Manhattan penthouse. I stepped out, my heels clicking against the marble flooring as I adjusted the Hermès scarf around my neck. The board meeting had ended early, giving me a rare chance to surprise Marcus with lunch. Ten years of marriage, and I still clung to these small gestures, these desperate attempts to rekindle what we once had.
The penthouse was unusually quiet. Normally, Mrs. Reynolds, our housekeeper, would be bustling about, but it was her day off. I set my purse down on the console table, noticing Marcus's keys were there. Good. He was home.
"Marcus?" I called out, my voice echoing through our sprawling home.
No answer.
I slipped off my Louboutins, padding quietly across the living room toward his study. As I rounded the corner into our main living area, I froze.
Time seemed to slow, each heartbeat thundering in my ears like a death knell.
Marcus—my husband—was on our Italian leather sofa, his shirt unbuttoned, his hands tangled in the honey-blonde hair of a woman straddling his lap. Her red dress was hiked up around her waist, her head thrown back in pleasure as his lips traced her neck.
Rebecca Taylor. I recognized her immediately from the charity galas. Eleanor's goddaughter.
I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. The world tilted sideways as ten years of marriage crystallized into this single, devastating moment.
Marcus saw me first. His eyes met mine over Rebecca's shoulder, and I expected to see shock, perhaps guilt. Instead, I saw something far worse: calm recognition. This wasn't an accident. This was choreographed.
"Grace," he said, his voice steady. He didn't push Rebecca away. "You're home early."
Rebecca turned, her lipstick smudged, a triumphant smile playing at the corners of her mouth. "Oh," she said, making no move to adjust her dress. "How awkward."
I stood there, my fingers unconsciously arranging and rearranging the items in my pocket—a nervous habit from childhood. One paper clip. Two coins. My wedding ring suddenly felt like it was burning into my flesh.
"I see I've interrupted," I said, my voice coming from somewhere far away, someone who wasn't me. Someone stronger.
A movement in the doorway caught my eye. Eleanor Hamilton stood there, her silver hair perfectly coiffed, her pearl necklace gleaming against her navy dress. My mother-in-law's expression was cold, calculating, as if she were observing a mildly interesting business transaction.
"Grace," she said, her voice like ice. "This is... unfortunate timing. Though perhaps it's for the best. Saves us the trouble of a formal discussion."
She stepped further into the room, her heels clicking against the hardwood floor with the finality of a judge's gavel.
"Rebecca will be moving into the estate in the Hamptons," Eleanor continued, as if discussing a change in dinner plans. "She will provide the Hamilton family with what you clearly cannot—an heir."
The words sliced through me, reopening a wound that had never fully healed. My infertility—the great failure that had overshadowed my Harvard degree, my Wall Street success, my decade of devotion to their family.
"And you," Eleanor said, her eyes narrowing, "will assist her in settling in. After all, you've had ten years to learn the family's ways. You can at least be useful in that regard."
Rebecca smirked, finally sliding off Marcus's lap and smoothing down her dress with deliberate slowness. My husband—the man I had loved, supported, believed in—didn't even look at me. He simply buttoned his shirt, as if I were a minor inconvenience in his day.
Something shifted inside me then. A seismic realignment of everything I thought I knew. The Grace Hamilton who had entered this penthouse—the devoted wife, the woman who believed in love and second chances—died in that moment. In her place, something colder, harder, and infinitely more dangerous was born.
I looked at the three of them—my husband, his mistress, his mother—and I nodded once, my face a mask of calm acceptance.
"Of course," I said softly. "I understand completely."
And I did. For the first time in ten years, I understood exactly what I needed to do.
Eleanor's eyebrow raised slightly, surprised by my acquiescence. She had expected tears, hysteria, a scene. Instead, I gave her nothing but a placid smile that didn't reach my eyes.
Little did she know, behind that smile, I was already calculating their destruction.
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