LOGIN"You mean nothing to me, Monica. This marriage was just business." George's cold words shattered my heart as I watched him with Sharon. Three years of marriage, gone in one night of betrayal. But fate had other plans. One passionate night led to unexpected consequences. Now he's back, desperate to win me back, but I'm not the broken woman he left behind. Will revenge be sweeter than love? Or will our baby change everything between us?
View MoreMonica Winston unlocked the penthouse door quietly. She wanted to surprise George for their third wedding anniversary. The roses and champagne felt heavy in her arms as she climbed the stairs.
Their bedroom door was half open. She heard voices inside.
"The divorce papers are ready," George said. "I'll serve them next week."
Monica froze on the staircase.
"Finally," a woman laughed. Sharon Don's voice. "I can't wait to get that pathetic wife of yours out of our lives."
Monica crept closer to the door. Through the gap, she saw George and Sharon in bed together. Naked. Sharon was tracing circles on George's chest.
"Three years of pretending to love Monica was exhausting," George said. "But her family connections were worth it. Now that Winston Corporation is established, I don't need her anymore."
"What about the settlement?" Sharon asked.
"Minimal. She contributed nothing to the business. Just played housewife and spent my money."
Monica's hands shook. The roses fell to the floor.
"She actually thinks you love her," Sharon said. "How pathetic."
"Monica was always naive. Made her easy to control. Sign here, attend this event, smile for the cameras. Perfect corporate wife material."
"And now she'll be replaced by a better model," Sharon kissed his neck. "Me."
"Our marriage will merge Don Industries with Winston Corporation. Double the assets, triple the market share."
Monica backed away from the door. Her whole body trembled. Three years of marriage. Three years of believing George loved her.
She ran down the stairs and grabbed her purse. The roses lay scattered on the floor like her broken dreams.
At the hotel, Monica cried until dawn. Every anniversary gift, every I love you, every promise about their future - all lies.
Her phone rang at 8 AM. George's lawyer.
"Mrs. Winston? This is Attorney Morrison. I need to serve you with divorce papers."
"Already?"
"Mr. Winston wants this handled quickly and quietly. He's prepared to offer you fifty thousand dollars as settlement."
Fifty thousand. For three years of marriage. For believing his lies.
"I'll need time to review the papers."
"Mr. Winston expects your signature by Friday. He's planning to announce his engagement to Miss Sharon Don next week."
Monica hung up. George was already engaged to Sharon. How long had they been planning this?
She called her mother in Connecticut.
"Monica, sweetheart, what's wrong?"
"George is divorcing me, Mom. He's been cheating with his business partner."
"Oh honey, I'm so sorry. Come home. Stay with us until you figure things out."
"I can't. Everyone will know I'm a failure."
"You're not a failure. George is a fool for losing you."
But Monica felt like a failure. She'd trusted George completely. Loved him with everything she had. And he'd played her like a business transaction.
That evening, George came to her hotel room. He looked tired and guilty.
"Monica, we need to talk."
"There's nothing to say. Sign here, attend this event, smile for the cameras. Isn't that what you want?"
George winced. "You heard us."
"Every word. Three years of marriage was just business to you."
"It wasn't supposed to happen like this."
"Which part? The cheating or getting caught?"
George sat on the hotel room chair. "I do care about you, Monica."
"Care? You told Sharon I was pathetic."
"I was trying to impress her. She's important for the business merger."
"More important than your wife."
George rubbed his face. "The company needs this merger to survive. My father built Winston Corporation from nothing. I can't let it fail."
"So you'll sacrifice our marriage for business."
"The marriage was arranged anyway. Your father suggested it when Winston Corporation needed Charleston family connections for social credibility."
Monica stared at him. "My father arranged our marriage?"
"You didn't know? He thought it would benefit both our families."
Another lie. Another betrayal. Her own father had sold her to George like a business asset.
"Get out," Monica said quietly.
"Monica, please. We can work something out. Maybe postpone the divorce until after the merger."
"Get out now."
George stood up. "I'll have Morrison contact you about the settlement details."
After he left, Monica called her father.
"Dad, did you arrange my marriage to George?"
Silence on the line.
"Monica, it seemed like a good match. Both families benefited."
"Did anyone care what I wanted?"
"You seemed happy with George."
"Because I thought he loved me. I thought I chose him."
"Sweetie, most marriages start as business arrangements. Love grows over time."
"Not this one."
Monica hung up and threw the phone across the room.
The phone skittered across the hardwood floor, its battery cover popping off. She stared at it, her chest heaving with anger and betrayal. Twenty-eight years old, and she was just now learning that her entire adult life had been orchestrated by men who saw her as a commodity.
Everyone had lied to her. George, her father, probably her mother too. She was just a pawn in their business games.
The memories came flooding back now, viewed through this new lens of understanding. Those chance encounters with George at charity galas—had they been chance at all?
The way her father had suddenly started inviting the Winston family to their country club events. George's perfectly timed appearance at her college graduation party, how her parents had practically pushed them together on the dance floor.
"How could I have been so naive?" she whispered to the empty room.
She thought about her mother, always encouraging her to "be a good wife," to "support George's ambitions," to "remember that marriage requires compromise." Now she understood what those euphemisms really meant: disappear yourself for the sake of the family business.
But she wouldn't be a victim anymore.
Monica picked up the scattered pieces of her phone and reassembled it with shaking hands. She needed to focus on something concrete, something she could control. Her eyes fell on the divorce papers spread across the coffee table like legal shrapnel from her exploded life.
She walked over and picked up the documents, scanning them with fresh eyes. The settlement terms were insulting—George wanted her to disappear quietly and take almost nothing.
A modest monthly allowance, no claim to the house they'd shared, no stake in the investments they'd built together. He'd even had the audacity to claim the jewelry he'd given her as "family heirlooms" that should remain with the Winston estate.
The papers painted her as a dependent spouse who had contributed nothing of value to their partnership. No mention of the countless business dinners she'd hosted, the relationships she'd cultivated, the deals she'd helped close through careful social maneuvering. To George, she'd been nothing more than attractive wallpaper.
She grabbed a pen from the side table, her hand steady now despite her racing heart. The anger was crystallizing into something harder, more focused. She read every line carefully, noting each calculated insult, each attempt to minimize her worth.
When she reached the signature page, she paused. This was it, the end of Monica Winston and everything that identity had represented. The grateful daughter, the dutiful wife, the smiling accessory to other people's ambitions.
She signed her name with deliberate strokes: Monica Charleston. Her maiden name felt foreign on the pen, but also liberating.
But not as the broken woman George expected.
Starting tomorrow, Monica Charleston will build her own life. She had a business plan forming in her mind, contacts from years
of networking, and a deep understanding of how these corporate dynasties really operated.
And someday, George Winston would regret underestimating her.
George knew where I'd gone before I reached the New Jersey Turnpike on the way back. Simon had tracked my car. I'd suspected he might I'd even understood it, in the thinking part of my brain, as a reasonable precaution given everything Germany had said about my father being "in play." Understanding it didn't make it sit better. I drove in silence for an hour before I called. "You had Simon track me," I said. "Yes." he didn't hesitate "We talked about this, about boundaries." "We talked about you having freedom over your choices, I wasn't interfering with your choice. I was making sure someone knew where you were." His voice was steady. "If you want to be angry about it, be angry. You're allowed. But I'm not going to apologize for making you could be found if something happened." I wanted to find the flaw in that logic. I sat with it for ten miles and couldn't locate one that wasn't more about pride than safety. "He's coming back with me," I said. "My father." "Simon alrea
I drove to Philadelphia alone. George hated this, he said so once, plainly and then helped me plan the route and didn't say it again. That was the version of him I was learning to trust, the one who voiced his fear and then respected my answer. My father was in a Holiday Inn off the I-95 corridor, three hours south, paying cash and using his middle name on the registration. He was not difficult to find once Simon pulled his credit card trail from before he'd started paying cash at a gas station outside Trenton, a diner near Princeton. My father had never been particularly good at disappearing. He was a man who'd spent his whole life making himself visible in the right rooms. He answered the door on my second knock and looked at me the way people look when they've been rehearsing a conversation and the other person has arrived before they're ready. He'd aged since I'd last seen him at Christmas. Something in his face had collapsed inward, the particular erosion of a man who'd been
Give me an hour," George said. "George..." "One hour. I need Simon here. I need to show you, not just tell you, because if I just tell you it sounds crazy. He held my gaze. "One hour. If after that you don't believe me, I won't fight it." "One hour," I said. He called Simon. I went to check on Georgia, who was back from Eleanor's and currently conducting a tea party with her rabbit, two stuffed bears, and a plastic dinosaur she'd recently decided was friendly. I sat on the edge of her bed and watched her pour invisible tea and felt the particular ache of loving someone so completely that it rearranges your priorities without asking permission. Whatever George was about to tell me, Georgia needed her father to be who he appeared to be. And I needed to know the truth, regardless. Simon arrived in forty minutes. He and George sat across from me at the kitchen table, Simon with a folder, George with nothing in front of him at all. "I've been in contact with Germany Slater,
The second sweep found two devices. A camera pinhole, mounted inside the smoke detector in the main hallway. And a listening device, different model from the first, planted inside the guest room's ventilation panel. Not the one Rodriguez's team had found. A second one, installed after the first sweep. Germany had sent someone in during the sweep itself. While Rodriguez's agents were methodically checking the apartment, one of them or someone posing as a building employee nearby had placed a second device. "He's showing off," George said. "He's showing us the FBI isn't airtight," I said. "Which we already knew, but now we know he knows we know it." Rodriguez took the devices into evidence without expression. She'd stopped apologizing for each new failure, which I respected. Apologies were noise. What I needed was results. "The camera in the hallway," I said. "How long has it been active?" Rodriguez didn't answer immediately. "Rodriguez." "Based on the storage capacity of the d
George came home on a Tuesday.Not to his penthouse, he was already there. What I mean is he came home the way people do after something has broken them open and put them back together slightly differently. Quieter. More careful with the space around him.His arm was in a sling. He refused the pres
Sharon Don had never gone to prison.Tyler had the truth within two hours, pulled from court records and a contact at the Federal Detention Center who owed him a favor. Sharon's guilty plea had been entered, accepted, and then quietly vacated on a procedural technicality three days later, an error
The envelope never made it to me.George arrived in twenty minutes. Agent Rodriguez arrived in thirty. They pulled the lobby footage, identified the delivery man as a mid-level associate of Germany's named Corey Hall, and had him in an interview room by midnight.Corey Hall wouldn't say a word."He'
George showed up at my door at seven in the morning with groceries.Not flowers. Not apologies wrapped in expensive packaging. Groceries. Two brown paper bags, a carton of orange juice tucked under his arm, and a look on his face like he'd rehearsed the next sixty seconds three times in the elevator












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