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Wife Ends Hamilton Empire Novel Cover

Wife Ends Hamilton Empire

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.
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Chapter 2

"I was thinking perhaps a soft cream for the walls," I said, running my fingertips along the master bedroom wall. "It catches the morning light beautifully."

Rebecca trailed behind me, her eyes darting around the space that had been mine for ten years. My marital bedroom. The place where I had once believed love lived.

"Cream is so... bland," she replied, wrinkling her nose. "I was thinking something bolder. Burgundy, perhaps. Marcus likes bold."

I smiled thinly, noting how she emphasized his name, claiming ownership. "Of course. You know best."

I watched her reflection in the mirror as she preened, running her hands over the Egyptian cotton sheets I'd selected years ago. Each touch was a deliberate act of possession, a flag planted in territory she believed was conquered.

"These will need to go," she said, fingering the drapes. "They're not my style at all."

"I have a wonderful contact at Bergdorf's," I offered, my voice honey-sweet. "She helped me select these. I'd be happy to introduce you."

Rebecca's eyes narrowed slightly, suspicious of my cooperation. "That's... thoughtful."

I nodded, mentally cataloging every detail: how she touched her stomach protectively when nervous, how her eyes lingered on the price tags I'd deliberately left visible on the new towels, how she photographed the bathroom fixtures with her phone—no doubt to research their cost later.

"The shower has a bit of a trick to it," I demonstrated the complicated temperature control. "Too hot and it scalds, too cold and it's freezing. There's a very small sweet spot."

She frowned. "Marcus should have that fixed."

"I've mentioned it many times," I said softly. "He doesn't like to be bothered with such things."

A flash of uncertainty crossed her face—the first crack in her armor. Good.

---

"It's extremely generous of you, Mrs. Hamilton," Arthur Taylor said, leaning forward across his cluttered desk. His office reeked of desperation and cheap aftershave.

"Please, call me Grace," I replied, sliding the investment proposal across to him. "After all, our families are becoming... intertwined."

His eyes darted away at the implication, a flush creeping up his neck. He knew exactly what his daughter was doing, and he didn't have the spine to feel shame.

"Seventy-five million," he breathed, flipping through the documents. "This would transform Taylor Industries."

"It's the least I can do," I said, watching him scan the pages without comprehension. The terms were deliberately complex—derivatives tied to market fluctuations, leveraged positions against Hamilton Corporation stock, trigger clauses buried in legal jargon.

"Of course, you'll want your legal team to review," I added, knowing full well his "team" was a single overworked attorney who wouldn't understand the sophisticated financial trap I'd constructed.

"Naturally," he nodded, but his eyes were already glazed with visions of wealth. "Though I trust the Hamilton name implicitly."

"As you should," I smiled, uncapping my Mont Blanc pen and offering it to him. "Family takes care of family."

He signed without reading the fine print. They never read the fine print.

---

Midnight found me in my sanctuary—a converted storage room hidden behind my walk-in closet. Marcus had never bothered to learn the layout of our home; he'd never notice this space existed.

The walls were covered with financial charts, market projections, and legal documents. Red string connected various points, creating a web of destruction only I could navigate.

I pinned Arthur Taylor's signed agreement to the center board and stepped back, allowing myself a moment of cold satisfaction.

"Phase one complete," I whispered to the empty room.

I uncapped a marker and began drafting the next stage: a complex series of stock transfers that would appear to be acts of wifely devotion but would actually trigger the financial equivalent of a neutron bomb.

My phone buzzed. A text from Marcus: "Where are you?"

I stared at it for a long moment. Ten years ago, such a message would have sent me rushing to his side. Now, I saw it for what it was—not concern, but control.

I typed back: "Just helping Rebecca select paint colors for your bedroom. Be there soon."

I returned to my charts, calculating precisely how much debt Marcus could accumulate before the entire structure collapsed. The number made me smile.

Four hundred million dollars. The exact value of his pride.

I'd spent ten years being the perfect wife, believing love could conquer all. Now I would spend ten months becoming their worst nightmare.

And they would never see me coming.

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