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You Lost Me: The Genius Heiress's Comeback Novel Cover

You Lost Me: The Genius Heiress's Comeback

I lay on the freezing bathroom floor, my life slipping away in crimson rivulets as I lost the baby Harrison claimed he wanted more than breath itself. In the next room, my husband was laughing into his phone, discussing party decorations with his mistress. When I finally dragged myself to the door to beg for help, he just stepped over me. "Call a doctor," he sighed, annoyed. "I have to go. Brooke's flight lands in an hour." Three days later, during a bank robbery, the gunmen held pistols to both our heads and gave Harrison a choice: save me, or save his mistress. Harrison didn't even blink. "Let the blonde go," he said, his voice void of emotion. "She's vital. Keep the wife. She's just insurance." I took a bullet because of him. But the true kill shot came when I woke up in the hospital. The family lawyer looked at me with pity and revealed the truth: Harrison never filed our marriage license. For three years, I wasn't his wife. I was just a prop. A clean face to front his estate while he laundered money. Harrison thought he had won when he drugged me and put me on a rigged boat to ship me away to an asylum. He watched from the dock as the vessel exploded into a fireball, believing his problem was incinerated. He thinks I'm dead. He thinks he's free to rule his empire with the woman who destroyed my life. But he forgot one thing: you can't kill a ghost. And I'm coming back to burn his world to ash.
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Chapter 1

I lay on the freezing bathroom floor, my life slipping away in crimson rivulets as I lost the baby Harrison claimed he wanted more than breath itself.

In the next room, my husband was laughing into his phone, discussing party decorations with his mistress.

When I finally dragged myself to the door to beg for help, he just stepped over me.

"Call a doctor," he sighed, annoyed. "I have to go. Brooke's flight lands in an hour."

Three days later, during a bank robbery, the gunmen held pistols to both our heads and gave Harrison a choice: save me, or save his mistress.

Harrison didn't even blink.

"Let the blonde go," he said, his voice void of emotion. "She's vital. Keep the wife. She's just insurance."

I took a bullet because of him.

But the true kill shot came when I woke up in the hospital.

The family lawyer looked at me with pity and revealed the truth: Harrison never filed our marriage license.

For three years, I wasn't his wife. I was just a prop. A clean face to front his estate while he laundered money.

Harrison thought he had won when he drugged me and put me on a rigged boat to ship me away to an asylum.

He watched from the dock as the vessel exploded into a fireball, believing his problem was incinerated.

He thinks I'm dead. He thinks he's free to rule his empire with the woman who destroyed my life.

But he forgot one thing: you can't kill a ghost.

And I'm coming back to burn his world to ash.

Chapter 1

Ava POV

I lay dying on the freezing mosaic of our master bathroom floor, my life slipping away in crimson rivulets, while my husband stood in the next room, laughing into his phone about party decorations for another woman.

Agony clawed through my lower abdomen, a physical twisting that felt like my insides were being wrung out like a wet towel. I clutched the porcelain edge of the toilet, my knuckles bleached white, cold sweat dripping down my temples. I tried to call out his name, but it came out as a broken whimper.

"Harrison," I gasped, the name scraping my throat.

Through the slightly ajar door, I heard him. His voice was rich, baritone, the kind of voice that commanded rooms and silenced board meetings of the Syndicate. He was a Capo, a man whose word was law in this city, a man who had killed for less than disrespect.

"Red roses, Brooke. Obviously," he said, his tone light, teasing-a lover's caress in audio form. "It's a celebration. I want the whole estate to smell like you."

I squeezed my eyes shut. Brooke. The analyst. The 'asset'.

Another cramp hit me, darker and deeper than the last. I looked down. The pristine white tile was stained with bright, terrifying crimson. I was losing it. I was losing the heir he claimed he wanted more than breath itself.

I dragged myself to the door, leaving a smear of red behind me like a macabre trail. I pushed it open.

Harrison stood by the window, looking out at the sprawling lawn of our gated estate. He looked impeccable in his charcoal suit, the very picture of the Syndicate's Golden Boy. He turned at the sound of the door hitting the wall.

His eyes landed on me. Then on the blood.

For a second, I expected horror. I expected the rush of the protective husband, the man who vowed to shield me from the world.

Instead, he frowned.

He covered the mouthpiece of his phone.

"Ava, keep it down," he hissed, his gaze glacial. "I'm on an important call."

"Harrison... the baby," I choked out, sliding down the doorframe as my legs gave way.

He stared at me for a heartbeat too long. Then he sighed, a sound of inconvenience, not grief. "Call the family doctor. I have to go. Brooke's flight lands in an hour."

He turned his back on me.

He walked out of the room. He walked out of the house.

I miscarried our child alone in the backseat of an Uber because my husband's driver was busy picking up his mistress.

Three days later, I was standing in the lobby of the First City Bank.

I shouldn't have been there. I should have been in bed, mourning the hollow ache in my womb. But Harrison had insisted. Appearances, Ava. The Family needs to see we are strong.

He stood near the vault, charming the bank manager. It was a front, of course. Everything with Harrison was a front. He was negotiating a money-laundering route, using his smile as a weapon.

I stood by the pillar, swaying slightly, feeling like a ghost in my own skin.

Then the glass shattered.

Men in masks stormed in, assault rifles raised. Screams erupted. Chaos. I dropped to the floor, covering my head, the instinct to survive warring with the wish that I hadn't.

"Nobody move!" a gunman roared.

Harrison didn't flinch. He raised his hands slowly, his face a mask of calm. He was a predator among scavengers. He began to speak, his voice steady, trying to de-escalate.

Then I saw her. Brooke.

She had walked in just moments before the robbery, supposedly to bring Harrison 'files'. She was cowering behind a desk, sobbing theatrically.

The lead gunman grabbed me by the hair, dragging me up. The barrel of a gun pressed against my temple. "Open the vault, or the pretty wife paints the floor!"

Another gunman grabbed Brooke.

"We only need one hostage for leverage!" the leader shouted at Harrison. "You choose, rich boy. Who walks, and who stays?"

Time stopped.

I looked at Harrison. This was my husband. The man I had served faithfully for three years. The man whose ring sat heavy on my finger.

He looked at me. His eyes were void of emotion. Then he looked at Brooke, who was trembling, her big doe eyes pleading with him.

"Let the blonde go," Harrison said. His voice didn't waver. "She's vital to my operation. Keep the wife. She's just insurance."

The air left my lungs. It wasn't the gun against my head that killed me. It was his words.

She's just insurance.

The gunman laughed, a cruel, grating sound. He shoved Brooke toward the exit. She scrambled away without looking back.

Then the sirens wailed. The gunman panicked.

The explosion of the gun next to my ear was deafening. I felt a searing heat in my shoulder, a punch that knocked me off my feet. Darkness rushed in at the edges of my vision.

The last thing I saw was Harrison running. Not toward me. He was running toward the door, chasing after her.

I woke up to the steady beep of a monitor.

The hospital room was sterile, white, and empty. No flowers. No husband sleeping in the chair.

My shoulder throbbed, bandaged tight. But the pain in my chest was worse. It was a gaping hole where my heart used to be.

The door opened. It wasn't Harrison. It was Mr. Henderson, the Family's lawyer. He looked uncomfortable, clutching a briefcase like a shield.

"Mrs. Phelps," he said, clearing his throat. "I'm glad you're awake."

"Where is he?" My voice was sandpaper.

"Harrison is... managing the fallout. The press. It's a delicate time."

"I want a divorce," I said. The words tasted like ash, but they were solid. "Draft the papers. I want out. Now."

Henderson shifted on his feet. He didn't open his briefcase. He looked at me with something that resembled pity.

"Ava," he said softly. "There are no papers to draft."

I frowned, the drugs making my head swim. "What?"

"I checked the records at the City Hall. And the Family archives." He paused. "Harrison never filed the marriage license. Neither the civil one nor the one with the Consigliere."

The room spun.

"That's impossible," I whispered. "We had a ceremony. There were hundreds of people. The Don was there."

"It was theater, Ava," Henderson said, his voice dropping to a whisper. "A show. Legally, and in the eyes of the Commission, you are not his wife. You never were. You were just... a placeholder. A clean face to front his estate while he moved assets around."

My phone on the bedside table buzzed.

I reached for it with my good arm. It was a text from my brother, Dustin. We hadn't spoken in months because Harrison told me Dustin was using drugs, that he was dangerous.

Dustin: Ava, pick up. I hacked the police report from the accident years ago. The intel that sent Mom to that intersection? It came from a Russian analyst. Her name is Anya Petrova. She goes by Brooke Shelton now.

The phone slipped from my fingers and clattered onto the linoleum floor.

I wasn't just a wife he didn't love. I was a prop in a play directed by the woman who killed my mother.

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