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Wife's Raging Revenge Plan Novel Cover

Wife's Raging Revenge Plan

The Sullivan estate had never looked more magnificent. Crystal chandeliers cast warm golden light across the ballroom, where Seattle's most prominent families mingled beneath towering arrangements of white roses and peonies. I smoothed the silk of my champagne-colored gown, feeling the weight of my grandmother's pearls against my throat. Tonight was supposed to be perfect—the official announcement of my engagement to Jasper Sullivan, the culmination of an arrangement that had shaped my entire life. I caught my reflection in one of the gilt mirrors lining the walls. Twenty-three years old, and I looked every inch the society bride I'd been raised to become. My dark hair was swept into an elegant chignon, diamond earrings catching the light with each turn of my head. Everything was exactly as it should be, exactly as our families had planned since I was eight years old. "Lila, darling, you look absolutely radiant." Victoria Sullivan, Jasper's mother, appeared at my side, her smile warm but somehow strained. "Are you ready for the announcement?" I nodded, touching my collarbone—a nervous habit I'd never quite managed to break.
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Chapter 1

The Sullivan estate had never looked more magnificent. Crystal chandeliers cast warm golden light across the ballroom, where Seattle's most prominent families mingled beneath towering arrangements of white roses and peonies. I smoothed the silk of my champagne-colored gown, feeling the weight of my grandmother's pearls against my throat. Tonight was supposed to be perfect—the official announcement of my engagement to Jasper Sullivan, the culmination of an arrangement that had shaped my entire life.

I caught my reflection in one of the gilt mirrors lining the walls. Twenty-three years old, and I looked every inch the society bride I'd been raised to become. My dark hair was swept into an elegant chignon, diamond earrings catching the light with each turn of my head. Everything was exactly as it should be, exactly as our families had planned since I was eight years old.

"Lila, darling, you look absolutely radiant." Victoria Sullivan, Jasper's mother, appeared at my side, her smile warm but somehow strained. "Are you ready for the announcement?"

I nodded, touching my collarbone—a nervous habit I'd never quite managed to break. "Where is Jasper? I haven't seen him since the guests began arriving."

Something flickered across Victoria's face, too quick to interpret. "He's... preparing. You know how he likes everything to be just right."

The orchestra began playing a waltz, and couples moved onto the dance floor in a swirl of designer gowns and tailored tuxedos. I recognized faces from childhood—the Weatherbys, the Ashfords, the Chens. Diana Chen caught my eye from across the room and raised her champagne flute with an encouraging smile. This was my world, these were my people, and tonight would cement my place among them forever.

A hush fell over the crowd as Jasper finally appeared, climbing the steps to the small stage where the orchestra played. My heart quickened at the sight of him—tall, handsome, commanding in his black tuxedo. But something was wrong. His jaw was set too tightly, his movements stiff and mechanical. When our eyes met across the room, he looked away immediately.

Cold dread began to pool in my stomach.

"Ladies and gentlemen," Jasper's voice carried clearly through the microphone, silencing the last whispers. "Thank you all for joining us tonight for what was meant to be a celebration."

Was meant to be? The words hit me like ice water. I stepped forward, confusion clouding my vision as I tried to catch his eye again.

"I stand before you tonight to make an announcement, though not the one you were expecting." Jasper's hands gripped the microphone stand, his knuckles white. "I cannot, in good conscience, marry Lila Boyd."

The ballroom erupted in gasps and murmurs. My world tilted sideways, the elegant faces around me blurring into a kaleidoscope of shock and barely concealed delight at the scandal unfolding before them. This couldn't be happening. Not here, not like this.

"I'm in love with someone else," Jasper continued, his voice growing stronger with each word that destroyed me. "Someone who has shown me what true love really means."

I couldn't breathe. The pearls at my throat felt like a noose, the silk gown suddenly suffocating. Around me, Seattle's elite society watched with rapt attention as my life crumbled in real time.

"Elyse, would you join me?"

From among the catering staff, a young woman stepped forward. Elyse Howard—the housekeeper's daughter. I knew her face, had seen her countless times moving quietly through the Sullivan house, invisible in the way that servants were trained to be. But now she walked toward the stage with her chin raised, her simple black dress somehow transformed into something almost elegant under the chandelier light.

The crowd parted for her like the Red Sea, whispers following in her wake. "Isn't that the housekeeper's girl?" "How long has this been going on?" "Poor Lila, how humiliating."

Jasper descended from the stage and took Elyse's hand, leading her up to stand beside him. The microphone picked up his next words with crystal clarity: "Elyse Howard has agreed to be my wife."

Then, in a gesture that would haunt my nightmares for years to come, he reached into his pocket and withdrew the engagement ring—my engagement ring, the one that had belonged to his grandmother, the one that was supposed to symbolize our future together. Without hesitation, without even a glance in my direction, he slipped it onto Elyse's finger.

"I love you," he whispered to her, but the microphone caught those words too, broadcasting them to the hundreds of guests who had come to celebrate my engagement.

The room spun around me. Faces stared with a mixture of pity and fascination, their eyes bright with the thrill of witnessing such spectacular social destruction. I felt exposed, flayed open, every carefully constructed piece of my identity scattered across the marble floor like broken glass.

I couldn't stay. I couldn't bear another second of their stares, their whispers, their barely concealed excitement at my downfall. Without a word, without looking back, I gathered my skirts and fled through the crowd, past the shocked faces and pointing fingers, past Diana's horrified expression and Victoria's pale, stricken features.

Behind me, I heard Jasper call my name once, but I didn't stop. I ran through the grand foyer, past the family portraits that had once seemed to welcome me, and out into the Seattle night that suddenly felt foreign and hostile.

Everything I had believed about my life, my future, my worth—all of it lay in ruins behind me, scattered across a ballroom floor like the petals of crushed roses.

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