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Wife Exposes Surrogacy Fraud Novel Cover

Wife Exposes Surrogacy Fraud

The champagne tastes like ash in my mouth. I set the glass down carefully on the white tablecloth, my fingers steady despite the roaring in my ears. Around me, Seattle's elite fill the Fairmont Olympic Hotel's grand ballroom, their designer gowns and tailored suits a blur of color and congratulation. Clark Corporation's IPO has been declared a spectacular success. My husband stands at the podium bathed in golden light, his speech about gratitude and partnership flowing smoothly from lips I once kissed with genuine affection. Five years. Five years of building this moment, of leveraging every Hansen family connection, of turning a charming man with business acumen into the CEO now commanding this room's attention. My father sits beside me, his posture rigid in a way that speaks volumes to anyone who knows him. He never trusted Maverick. I ignored his warnings, believing love could coexist with strategy, that my careful protections—the contraceptive injections, the corporate structures keeping true ownership in Hansen hands—meant I could have both partnership and safety.
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Chapter 1

The champagne tastes like ash in my mouth.

I set the glass down carefully on the white tablecloth, my fingers steady despite the roaring in my ears. Around me, Seattle's elite fill the Fairmont Olympic Hotel's grand ballroom, their designer gowns and tailored suits a blur of color and congratulation. Clark Corporation's IPO has been declared a spectacular success. My husband stands at the podium bathed in golden light, his speech about gratitude and partnership flowing smoothly from lips I once kissed with genuine affection.

Five years. Five years of building this moment, of leveraging every Hansen family connection, of turning a charming man with business acumen into the CEO now commanding this room's attention. My father sits beside me, his posture rigid in a way that speaks volumes to anyone who knows him. He never trusted Maverick. I ignored his warnings, believing love could coexist with strategy, that my careful protections—the contraceptive injections, the corporate structures keeping true ownership in Hansen hands—meant I could have both partnership and safety.

How spectacularly naive.

Maverick pauses mid-sentence, his hand moving to his heart in a gesture of emotion that looks rehearsed now that I'm watching for the cracks. "Before we continue tonight's celebration," he says, his voice catching just enough to sound genuine, "I need to share something deeply personal. Miranda, my extraordinary wife, has given me more than I could ever deserve."

The room's attention shifts to me. I feel their eyes like physical weight, and I arrange my features into pleasant neutrality, the mask I've worn to a thousand corporate dinners. My father's hand shifts beneath the table, reaching for his phone. He senses it too—the predator's pause before the strike.

"But there's one gift she gave me," Maverick continues, "that I've kept secret for two years. A gift that represents our future, our legacy, and my deepest gratitude for her faith in me."

He signals toward the side entrance. The crowd's murmur rises in speculation.

A nanny I've never seen before walks onto the stage, her sensible shoes clicking against marble. In her arms, she carries a child—a boy, perhaps two years old, with dark curls and Maverick's chin. The room erupts in gasps. Someone near me whispers, "Oh my God." Another voice: "I had no idea!"

Maverick takes the child with practiced ease, cradling him with the confidence of familiarity that makes my blood freeze. "Miranda couldn't carry our child herself," he says, his voice breaking in what the room will interpret as joy but I recognize as something else entirely—triumph. "So we arranged an egg donation, a surrogate. And this—this is our son. Our miracle. The surprise I've been planning since the day he was born."

The mathematics are immediate and damning. Two years old. We were married three years when this child would have been conceived. I was supposedly involved in arranging his creation while I was secretly ensuring Maverick remained infertile, while our marriage was still intact enough that I might have believed in such a future.

This is impossible. This is a lie constructed so elaborately that its exposure will require precision.

The child, perfectly coached, reaches small hands toward Maverick's face. "Daddy!" he says clearly, and the room dissolves into appreciative sounds. Cameras flash from every corner—photographers Maverick personally approved for tonight's event, now capturing this "spontaneous" family moment.

I remain seated. I don't stand. I don't smile. I don't perform the joyful mother for their consumption, and my stillness becomes its own statement in the room's chaos. Women I barely know start moving toward me, their faces alight with emotion that feels like accusation dressed as celebration.

Then she appears.

Yara Thompson emerges from the crowd in a dress carefully calculated to project modesty and sacrifice—cream-colored, conservative cut, a gold cross at her throat. I've never seen her before, but I recognize the type immediately: beautiful enough to be useful, practiced enough to be dangerous. Tears stream down her carefully made-up face as she approaches the stage.

"I had the honor," she begins, her voice trembling with rehearsed emotion, "of carrying this precious baby for Miranda. Of experiencing pregnancy for a woman who couldn't experience it herself." Her hand rests on her abdomen in remembered maternity. "I felt him move inside me, I brought him into this world, and then I gave him to his real mother—because that's what he needed. That's what Miranda needed."

The room is transfixed. Several women dab at their eyes.

"I only hope," Yara continues, looking directly at me with eyes that plead while calculating, "that Miranda will let me remain part of his life. Not as his mother—I could never claim that—but as the woman who brought him into the world. Who loved him first."

The child reaches for her, calling "Mama!" before Maverick gently redirects him. The choreography is perfect. Too perfect. Every moment of this has been staged, rehearsed, designed to manipulate maximum emotional response.

I watch my mother-in-law across the room, her smile serene and satisfied. Maverick's brother Caiden stands near the bar, his expression unreadable but his knuckles white around his glass. The pieces are already forming a pattern, a conspiracy with edges I can't quite see yet.

But I will.

I reach for my wine glass again, taking one small sip while the room erupts in applause. My father's hand finds mine beneath the table, his grip tight enough to communicate everything he won't say in this public space. We understand each other perfectly.

They've made their move. Now I'll make mine.

The celebration continues around me, but I'm already three steps ahead, calculating timelines and impossibilities, planning the systematic destruction of whatever Maverick thinks he's built tonight.

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