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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 3

Three days. That's all it takes for them to act as if the Hansen estate belongs to them.

I watch from my study window as Maverick's mother directs caterers through the front entrance, her voice carrying across the manicured lawn with the confidence of someone who believes she's already won. She's hosting a dinner tonight—a "family celebration," she called it when she informed me this morning over breakfast. Not asked. Informed.

I said nothing. Just sipped my coffee and watched her face fall slightly when I didn't object, didn't rage, didn't give her the satisfaction of a reaction.

The child—I still refuse to call him by the name they've chosen—sits in the main sitting room with Yara. Through the leaded glass windows, I can see them arranged like a museum exhibit. She reads to him from a picture book, her voice pitched to carry, her profile angled toward the window where afternoon light makes her look ethereal and maternal. A photographer "happened" to drive by yesterday and captured the touching scene. It made the society pages this morning.

I photographed that too. Added it to the file I'm building—evidence of their presumption, their invasion, the way they're rewriting the narrative of my home before my eyes.

Toys litter the hallway now. A red truck near the stairs. Building blocks in the library. A stuffed elephant in my father's chair. Each one placed with strategic carelessness, marking territory like animals leaving scent.

Maverick finds me in the study just before five. He's changed into casual elegance—navy sweater, pressed khakis, the watch I bought him for our second anniversary. He looks like he belongs here. That's always been his greatest talent.

"You've been hiding all day," he says, his tone light but with an edge of accusation beneath. "My mother went to a lot of trouble for tonight."

I turn from the window slowly, meeting his eyes with the emptiness I've perfected over three days of their occupation. "Your mother is hosting a dinner in my home without my permission. I wouldn't call that trouble. I'd call it presumption."

Something flickers across his face—frustration, maybe, or the first hint that this isn't going according to plan. "Miranda, he's our son. This is his home too now. You can't keep acting like—"

"Like what?" I keep my voice soft, curious. "Like a woman who doesn't recognize the child being presented to her? Like someone who finds it strange that you've never once asked me directly if I wanted to participate in creating him?"

He steps closer, his hand reaching for mine. I let him take it, let him feel how cold my fingers are. "I wanted to surprise you. To give you something beautiful, something that would make up for—"

"For what, Maverick?" I pull my hand away gently, no violence in the gesture but absolute finality. "What exactly are you making up for?"

He doesn't answer. Can't answer without revealing too much. Instead, he changes tactics, his voice softening into the tone he uses when he wants something. "Come to dinner tonight. Just sit with us. Let people see that we're a family."

"People," I repeat. "You've invited press?"

"Photographers. Just a few. For the announcement we're making next week about his role in—"

"His role." I turn back to the window, dismissing him without another word. "Close the door on your way out."

He doesn't move for a long moment. I can feel him weighing options, calculating his next approach. Then his footsteps retreat, and the door clicks shut with careful control.

Through the window, I watch Caiden arrive, parking his BMW beside his mother's Mercedes. He glances up at the house before entering, and something in his expression makes me reach for my phone, capturing the moment. Guilt? Anxiety? The face of a man watching a plan spiral beyond his control.

At seven, the dining room fills with voices. Maverick's family, a few business associates he's cultivated, couples from the country club who've always been more curious about Hansen wealth than genuinely friendly. I hear glasses clinking, laughter rising. Yara's voice thanking someone for their kind words about her "sacrifice."

I don't go down.

Instead, I sit in my study with the door locked, reviewing Robert Kim's preliminary report on my laptop. Caiden's name appears seventeen times in connection with Yara. Seventeen documented instances of contact over three years. The fertility clinic footage is damning—his hand on her lower back, the way he signed paperwork while Maverick was supposedly in Singapore on business.

My phone buzzes. A text from my father: *They're asking where you are. Hold the line.*

I respond: *I'm exactly where I need to be.*

Another buzz. This time it's a news alert—Maverick has given an interview to Seattle Magazine about "integrating his son into the Hansen legacy." The article discusses succession plans, the child's future role in Clark Corporation, how "Miranda is adjusting to motherhood."

I screenshot it. Add it to my evidence file. Document each presumption, each lie, each word spoken in my name without my consent.

Outside my window, the city lights begin to glow across the sound. Somewhere in this house, they're celebrating their invasion. Toasting their conquest. Believing they've already won.

Let them believe it. Let them grow comfortable, confident, careless.

I have meetings scheduled tomorrow—Diana Chen at ten, Robert Kim at two. By week's end, I'll have DNA results. By month's end, I'll have legal documentation of every coordinated lie.

And then I'll show them exactly what happens when you mistake silence for surrender.

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