LOGINFor three years, Eliza Sterling has lived with a quiet grief. After giving her husband, Scott, her entire fortune and her father's company, her only regret is the child they've been unable to conceive. On the morning of their third anniversary, she discovers Scott’s real betrayal: a secret plan to sell her father's empire out from under her, confiding in his CFO that his wife is “a soft spot” to be managed. But the real devastation waits in his office. There, she finds Scott with her stepsister, Chloe—a betrayal made monstrous when Chloe reveals the truth: their infertility is Scott’s choice, a cold strategy to prevent a true heir. Eliza is left utterly ruined, her heart, her home, and her legacy stolen. Her only offer of help comes from Adam Thorne, Scott’s rival, who presents not condolences but a partnership. In exchange for his legal and strategic might to destroy Scott, he wants a piece of the company. Eliza accepts, forging a bond built on revenge and a sharp, growing respect. As Scott watches the wife he took for granted become his most dangerous enemy, he is consumed by a regret that may be too late. Eliza must navigate a war on two fronts: a corporate battle to reclaim her power, and a personal war for her future, caught between the husband who shattered her and the rival who challenges her to rebuild herself from the ashes.
View MoreEliza's POV
The stick in my hand stayed cruelly single-lined. Negative. Again.
I stared at it longer than I should have, waiting for that faint second line to appear like it sometimes did in my dreams. Nothing. Just one lonely blue mark mocking me from the bathroom counter. I had done this same thing every single month for three years. Same brand, same time of day, same hope that crashed the same way.
Three years of marriage. No baby. No bump. No tiny kicks. Nothing to hold, nothing to show anyone. People at parties asked the usual questions with those pity smiles, and I learned to laugh it off. "We're enjoying just us for now," I'd say. Lies. All lies.
I used to cry after these tests. The first year, tears came fast and hot. The second year, they were quieter. This time? Nothing. My eyes stayed dry. Maybe I had finally run out of tears, or maybe the hurt had turned into something harder, something cold that sat heavy in my chest.
I heard Scott's shoes on the marble floor. He was coming toward the kitchen. My heart jumped—not from excitement, but from panic. I grabbed the nearest newspaper from the counter, wrapped the test stick tight inside it like I was hiding evidence, then pushed the whole bundle deep into the waste bin under coffee grounds and eggshells. The maids cleaned every evening. No one could see my failure.
Scott walked in. Tall, perfect suit, that easy smile he wore like a second skin. He leaned in and kissed my cheek without really looking at me. His lips barely touched my skin. He was already scrolling on his phone.
"Dinner at Le Cie tonight. 6:30," he said, voice flat like he was reading from a schedule. Not like a man excited to spend time with his wife. Just information.
"Okay," I answered softly.
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small velvet box. "For you."
I opened it. Diamond earrings. Beautiful. Sparkling. Exactly like the pair he gave me last Christmas. Same cut, same size. "To match the necklace," he said, already turning away.
I closed the box. "Thank you."
He nodded, kissed the air near my forehead, and left for his study. The room felt colder the second he was gone.
I stood there holding the box, feeling like one of those store mannequins he dressed up every season. New earrings. New dress. New bag. All perfect. All empty.
His tablet sat forgotten on the kitchen island. Black screen, sleek, expensive. I picked it up, thinking I would take it to him later. My thumb brushed the screen by accident. It lit up. No passcode. He trusted me that much. Or maybe he just didn't care.
A Slack notification was still open at the top.
From: Michael Reyes (CFO)
"Meeting confirmed with Thorne’s people. The merger play is aggressive. Keep your wife in the dark. She still has soft spots."
My fingers went numb. The tablet almost slipped from my hand.
Thorne. Adam Thorne.
My father's company. The one Dad built from nothing after years of sweat and late nights. The company I inherited when Dad died two years ago. The company Scott had been "managing" for me since we married because I "didn't like the stress."
Merger.
Aggressive.
Keep your wife in the dark.
She still has soft spots.
Soft spots. That was me. The emotional wife who might cry or fight if she knew her father's legacy was being sold off.
My stomach twisted. I scrolled up quickly. More messages. Numbers. Terms like "hostile bid," "board approval," "non-disclosure." Scott's replies were short, calm, all business.
I set the tablet down exactly where it was. My hands shook so badly I had to press them against the counter.
He was planning to sell my company. My father's company. And he didn't want me to know.
I walked to the living room on legs that felt like wood. Sat on the white sofa. Stared at the wall. Hours passed. Or maybe minutes. Time blurred.
My phone buzzed. A text from Scott.
Urgent. Come to my office now.
My first thought was worry. Something happened at work. An accident. A problem.
Then the Slack message flashed in my mind again.
Was this it? Was he finally going to tell me? Or was he going to lie to my face like he had been doing for months?
I stood up. My heart pounded so hard I could feel it in my throat. Part of me wanted to run upstairs, pack a bag, disappear. Another part—the stupid, hopeful part—wanted to believe he would explain everything. That there was a good reason. That he still loved me enough to be honest.
I walked down the long hallway to his private suite. The door was heavy, dark wood, polished until it shone like a mirror. My reflection looked small and pale.
I lifted my hand. Fingers touched the cool handle.
I took one last breath.
Then I pushed the door open.
Eliza's POV The plane touched down at JFK at noon. New York was gray, cold, the sky pressing down like a weight. Adam sat beside me, his hand on my knee. Across the aisle, Marcus stared out the window, his reflection tense. Reyes had stayed behind to handle Vera's interrogation, but she'd sent two agents to meet us at the bank. The vault was in a building on Wall Street. Old stone, brass doors, the kind of place where wealth had been hiding for centuries. I stood on the sidewalk, the key in my pocket, and tried to remember how to breathe. "You don't have to do this," Adam said. "I do." He took my hand. "Then let's go." The Bank The lobby was marble and silence. A woman in a tailored suit met us at the desk. "Ms. Sterling. We've been expecting you. Please follow me." She led us through a series of doors, each one heavier than the last.
Eliza's POV The first name dropped three days later. Senator Elizabeth Crane, a fifty-year-old grandmother from Ohio, was arrested at her home. The charges: bribery, conspiracy, and accessory to human trafficking. The evidence from the vault had been enough to hold her without bail. I watched the news on the kitchen television, Clara beside me, Adam standing in the doorway. The senator's face was pale, her eyes hollow. She didn't look like a monster. She looked like someone's mother. "Are you okay?" Clara asked. "I don't know." "You did the right thing." "I know." But knowing didn't make it easier. The Calls My phone started ringing immediately. Reporters, lawyers, strangers who'd somehow gotten my number. Reyes had warned me this would happen. "The names in that vault are connected to powerful people. They'll come after you
Eliza's POVThe cemetery was quiet.We came at dusk, when the shadows were long and the gates were about to close. Adam drove. Marcus sat in the back, silent. Reyes had a team hidden in the trees, watching for anyone who might be following.I hadn't been here since my mother's funeral. The headstone was simple, weathered by decades of rain and wind.Clara Sterling. Beloved mother. Rest in peace.I knelt in front of it. Touched the cold stone."I'm sorry," I whispered. "I should have come sooner."Marcus stood behind me. "The key is buried beneath the headstone. My father dug a small compartment. He said it was the only place the Collective would never look."Adam brought a small shovel. I didn't let him dig. This was my mother. My penance. I took the shovel and started to dig.The earth was soft. The work was hard. My hands blistered, but I didn't stop.Ruth watched from the car, her daughter a
Eliza's POVThe gate didn't creak anymore.Adam had fixed it years ago, replaced the old hinges, reinforced the latch. But I still heard it sometimes. A ghost sound. A reminder of all the people who'd walked through, hesitant and hopeful, afraid to believe they belonged.Clara stood beside me now, her hand on the wood."You're sure about this?" I asked."I've never been more sure."She pushed the gate open.On the other side, a woman waited. Young, maybe twenty five. A baby on her hip. A suitcase at her feet."Clara Sterling?" the woman asked."Clara Thorne now. But yes."The woman's eyes filled. "I'm Lydia. I think I'm your cousin. My mother she was one of the lost ones. She died before she could find this place."Clara stepped forward. "You're not lost anymore."Lydia stepped through the gate.The garden was full of light.The New GenerationI watc
Eliza's POVThe message glowed on my phone like a warning.Same place. Same time. Come alone.I read it again, as if the words would rearrange themselves into something less threatening. They didn't.Adam pulled the car to the side of the road. Turned to f
Eliza's POVThe photograph sat on my desk for three days.My mother and my aunt. Young. Laughing. Innocent. A world away from the women they'd become. One dead. One carrying the weight of forty years.I picked it up every morning. Looked at it. Tried to reconcile t
Eliza's POVOne year later.I stood on the balcony of our home—not a safe house, not a temporary shelter, but home—and watched the sun rise over Los Angeles.The city glittered below, waking slowly, full of lives and dreams and stories I'd never know. Somewhere out
Eliza's POVThe safe house was a concrete box buried in the middle of nowhere.Farmland stretched in every direction, flat and empty, nothing but cornfields and silence. The building itself had been a bunker once, Reyes explained—Cold War era, repurposed by the task force f
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