LOGINTo Julian, Susan was a burden to be discarded. After she sacrificed her elite career to marry him, he repaid her with infidelity and cruelty, mocking her body after motherhood and flaunting his mistresses in her presence. He thought that by stripping her of her pride, he would leave her with nothing. He was wrong. While working at a coffee shop just to get close to him, Susan never lost her genius. On the day of an interview that changed her life, she risks everything to save an old man from a speeding car. She arrives for the interview just to be mocked and shunned, only to realize the man she rescued is the patriarch of the Hawthorne Empire. Now, Susan is the rising star of the tech world, working for the formidable CEO Adrian Hawthorne. As she transforms into a powerhouse, a regretful Julian tries to reclaim the woman he once shamed. But Susan isn't looking back. Between a vengeful ex, a jealous heiress, and the Hawthorne heir who finally sees her true worth, Susan is about to prove that the best revenge isn't just moving on, it’s outshining everyone who ever doubted her.
View MoreThe music was too loud for a confrontation.
Laughter spilled across the private lounge like champagne, sharp and careless, bouncing off crystal glasses and polished marble floors. She stood at the entrance for a moment longer than necessary, her fingers tightening around the strap of her worn handbag as she took it all in. And then she saw him. Her husband was seated comfortably on a leather couch, one arm draped lazily over the backrest, the other wrapped around another woman. The woman was young, slim, beautiful in a way that magazines approved of. She wore a tight red dress that clung to her body like it had been sewn on with intention, her long legs crossed elegantly as she laughed at something he whispered into her ear. Her husband smiled. He never smiled like that at home. For a moment, the world tilted. She felt it physically, like the ground beneath her feet had shifted just enough to remind her how fragile balance really was. “Julian.” Her voice came out softer than she intended, nearly swallowed by the music. But it was enough. His head snapped up. Their eyes met. The smile on his face vanished instantly, replaced by irritation. No, disgust. As if she were the one who didn’t belong there. “What are you doing here?” he asked, already standing. The woman beside him looked her up and down slowly, her lips curving in something close to amusement. “I came looking for you,” she said. “You didn’t come home last night.” A beat of silence passed. Then he started to laugh a sharp, mocking laughter. Loud enough to draw the attention of the people around them, his friends, his associates, all now watching like this was free entertainment. “Look at you,” Julian scoffed, eyes raking over her body without shame. “Causing a scene again.” Her cheeks burned. She could feel it, the familiar heat of humiliation creeping up her neck, settling deep in her chest. “I just asked a question,” she said quietly. “You always do,” he snapped. “As if you have the right.” The woman beside him leaned closer, her manicured fingers brushing his arm possessively. “Is this your wife?” Julian didn’t answer immediately. When he did, his voice was cold. “Unfortunately.” The word landed like a slap. Susan swallowed hard. “I saw you with her,” she said, forcing the words out. “I just want to know why.” That was when his expression changed. Anger flared suddenly, violently, as though her presence alone was an offense. “Why?” he repeated. “You really want to ask me why?” He took a step closer, his voice rising, no longer caring who heard. “Look at yourself.” Her breath caught. “After you gave birth, you completely let yourself go,” he continued cruelly. “Fat. Bloated. You stopped caring how you looked. Do you expect me to stay faithful to that?” The room seemed to go quiet, though she knew it hadn’t. Her ears rang, her heartbeat pounding so loudly she could barely hear anything else. She glanced down at herself without meaning to. Loose dress. Tired eyes. A body that still carried the marks of pregnancy and sleepless nights. A body that had carried his child. “I carried your baby,” she whispered. “And?” he shot back. “I never asked you to keep that thing.” Gasps rippled through the room. Someone laughed nervously. Julian wasn’t done. “If you hadn’t seduced me that night,” he continued, pointing a finger at her like she was a criminal, “if you hadn’t drugged my drink, none of this would’ve happened. I would never have slept with you. I would never have gotten you pregnant. And I certainly wouldn’t be stuck in this miserable marriage.” Her vision blurred. “That’s not true,” she said, shaking her head. “You know it’s not...." “You trapped me,” he roared. “And then you stubbornly decided to keep that thing even after I told you to get rid of it.” The word thing echoed in her head. Not our child. Not our daughter. Just… thing. She looked around desperately. At his friends, who watched with amused detachment, at the woman beside him, who smirked openly now, at the people who had dined in her home, smiled to her face, eaten the meals she cooked. Not one person spoke up. Not one. Something inside her cracked. She straightened slowly, lifting her head. The shaking in her hands stopped. Three years. Three years of swallowing insults. Three years of pretending not to notice his affairs. Three years of being treated like a burden in a house she cleaned, cooked in, and bled for. She suddenly felt very tired. “I see,” she said softly. Julian sneered. “Good. Then stop embarrassing yourself and go home.” She looked at him for a long moment. Then she spoke the words that had been forming quietly in her heart for months. “I want a divorce.” The laughter came again, louder this time. “A divorce?” Julian repeated incredulously. “Don’t be ridiculous.” “You have nothing,” he added cruelly. “No money. No family. No place to go. Without me, you’re nothing.” She nodded once, slowly. “Then I’ll be nothing somewhere else.” She turned and walked away. Her steps were steady and she didn’t look back. She didn’t see the way his smile faded, just for a second, as if something he didn’t know how to name had slipped through his fingers.Susan woke to the sound of machines, a slow, rhythmic beeping. Cool air against her skin. The faint sting in her throat reminded her she’d been fighting for breath before backing out. Her eyelids fluttered open, the ceiling coming into focus in fragments.Hospital.“You’re awake.”Adrian’s voice was calm and controlled, but tight around the edges in a way she had never heard before. He stood beside her bed, jacket gone, sleeves rolled up, one hand resting lightly on the rail.Susan swallowed. Her throat burned. “Water?”He moved instantly, lifting the cup, adjusting the straw. “Slow.”She obeyed, taking a careful sip. The room steadied.“What happened?” she asked, though she already knew.Adrian’s jaw flexed. “Anaphylaxis. Severe. If we were five minutes later..." He stopped himself. “The doctors stabilized you.”Susan closed her eyes briefly.Peonies. Of course it would be peonies. Julian just had to buy the one flower she was deathly allergic to.“Did he...” she began.“He’s not her
Julian sat with his elbows on his knees, fingers buried in his hair, staring at the polished marble floor of the villa like it might offer answers.His head throbbed. Not from alcohol this time, but from the sound of laughter that still echoed in his ears.“I’m warning you,” he said finally, voice hoarse. “Stay away from her. Both of you.”Lisa scoffed from the armchair, legs crossed, phone in hand. “Oh please. She slapped me. In public.”“You provoked her.”He remembered how they had called him, crying and screaming how Susan bullied and slapped Lisa. He had wanted to rush over to confront Susan but he remembered the mall incident and investigated.He couldn't believe his mother and sister could spin so much lies, he couldn't believe they were this vile and could humiliate Susan this much even after they divorced.His mother waved a dismissive hand. “Julian, don’t be dramatic. That girl was always ungrateful...”He stood abruptly. “Say her name with respect.”Lisa stared at him. “You
Susan hadn’t realized how lonely she’d been until the moment she walked into the room and saw them.Her people.Faces she had known before Julian. Before sacrifice became her entire personality. Before love turned into endurance. They stood up almost at once, some too quickly, some hesitantly, like they weren’t sure they still had the right. And then the distance collapsed.Someone hugged her. Someone cried. Someone whispered her name like it had weight again.“I’m sorry,” one of them said, voice breaking.Another followed, softer. “We were angry at what you did to yourself.”Susan closed her eyes. They weren’t wrong and that hurt more than if they had been.They talked over one another at first, apologies tumbling out messy and unpolished. They told her how painful it had been to watch her abandon a future she had worked for with blood and brilliance, how it had felt like betrayal when she chose a man over herself, how seeing her in a waitress uniform in places she once owned the roo
Susan arrived at Hawthorne Corporation fifteen minutes early. She liked the stillness before the building woke up. The marble floors reflected the ceiling lights like polished ice. Security nodded at her as she passed. Her badge clicked softly against her blazer as she walked.She dropped her bag, powered up her terminal, and pulled up the overnight logs she’d flagged before leaving the day prior.Susan leaned forward, fingers flying across the keyboard as she ran a simulation. The result confirmed what she already knew. She compiled the findings into a concise report and sent it to Adrian.She reported directly to him. Three minutes later, her internal line chimed.“Come to the executive floor,” Adrian said. She grabbed her tablet and stood.The boardroom on the executive floor was already filling when Susan entered.Adrian Hawthorne stood at the head of the table, sleeves rolled once, posture relaxed in that dangerous way that screamed control. Around him sat Hawthorne’s senior stra


















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