LOGINAt her own engagement party, Cassie Reeves is humiliated in front of the elite when her fiancé chooses her best friend instead, turning her heartbreak into a public spectacle. But before the whispers can settle, his brother makes an offer. Dominic Hale has always lived in the shadow of the perfect heir, dismissed as reckless and underestimated by everyone who matters. Marrying Cassie is supposed to be a strategic move to secure power, restore his place in the family, and take everything his brother never thought he could. For Cassie, it’s simple. Revenge, reputation, and a chance to rewrite the narrative. Six months, one contract, no feelings. But the man she thought was a mistake becomes her strongest ally, her safest place, and the one person who sees her clearly. As more secrets unfold and betrayal cuts deeper than expected, Cassie realizes this was never just a game. The most dangerous move wasn’t marrying her ex’s brother. It was falling for him.
View More"To Marcus and Cassie," someone called out, and the sea of champagne flutes lifted in unison like a choreographed wave. The sound of glass clinking filled the air in celebration, each clink another nail in the coffin of Cassie's composure.
The crystal chandeliers of the Grand Rosewood Ballroom cast a thousand rays across three hundred of Manhattan's most influential faces, and Cassie Reeves thought she might vomit all over her Vera Wang engagement gown.
She stood beside Marcus Hale at the head table, her hand resting in the crook of his elbow because that's what fiancées did at engagement parties. Right?
They smiled and they glowed and pretended the weight of a three carat diamond didn't feel like a shackle around their ring finger.
But Marcus's jaw was stiff. She'd noticed it an hour ago when his mother Eleanor had made that comment about "finally settling down with someone appropriate," but she'd written it off as typical Hale family tension.
The Hales were old money, the kind that came with expectations and a spreadsheet for emotions. That was the first thing Marcus warned her about when they started dating three years ago.
"You look beautiful tonight," her mother whispered from her left, reaching over to squeeze Cassie's free hand. Margaret Reeves had tears in her eyes and she carried the air of pride mothers got when their daughters were about to marry into empires.
Cassie managed to smile. "Thanks, Mom."
Across the table, her father Richard sat with his phone face down beside his plate, which meant he was actually present for once. The merger between Reeves Capital and Hale Industries had consumed the last six months of both families' lives, and tonight was supposed to be the social seal on a business deal that would reshape Manhattan's financial landscape.
Just then, Marcus cleared his throat and the room fell quiet instantly because again, that's what happened when a Hale wanted attention.
Generations of wealth and influence had trained society to listen to them.
"Thank you all for being here tonight," Marcus began. He looked good in his Tom Ford tux, dark hair perfectly styled. His striking gorgeousness came from good genes and better skincare. She didn't need to worry about her kids' face cards.
"Cassie and I are grateful for your support as we begin this new chapter together."
Cassie's smile felt like it was cracking at the edges. Something was off. Marcus's hand had gone rigid under hers and his voice was smooth and controlled as if he was in a boardroom and not his engagement party.
"I need to be honest with everyone here," Marcus continued, and the room leaned in. "I need to be honest with myself."
Cassie's eyes shone as she looked up to his face as he spoke. She couldn't help but wonder if he had a surprise for her. Photographers were stationed at every corner because of course there were photographers, this was the society event of the season.
"I can't marry Cassie," Marcus said, and the words landed like a grenade in the center of the room. "Because I'm in love with someone else."
S
The collective gasp was almost comedic. If Cassie hadn't been the punchline, she might have appreciated the theatrical timing.
Her mother's hand went slack in hers and her father's jaw tightened.
But Cassie… she was numb with no reaction. She just stood there, frozen and trying to digest while her world imploded in real-time.
"I'm in love with Vanessa Laurent," Marcus continued, turning to look directly at the table where Cassie's best friend since sophomore year of college sat with her mouth open in what looked like “What the fuck?!”
"I have been in love with her for months. I'm sorry, Cassie. I'm sorry to everyone, but I can't start a marriage based on a lie."
The room erupted.
Voices overlapped, some sounded shaken and some delighted because nothing fed the society gossip machine like a public disaster. Cameras flashed, bright and blinding. Someone's phone was definitely up and recording because that's what people did now, they documented tragedy for content.
And Cassie still couldn't move. She could barely even breathe. She couldn't process the fact that Marcus had just annihilated her in front of everyone who mattered in their world. And for Vanessa!
Vanessa stood slowly from her table, her red dress vibrant against the cream and gold decor. She looked at Cassie with something that might have been regret or might have been pity, Cassie couldn't tell through the ringing in her ears.
Marcus stepped away from Cassie and walked across the ballroom like he was in a movie and this was romantic instead of devastating.
He took Vanessa's hand, pulled off the ring on his finger and slipped it on hers.
That was the moment Cassie's heart actually broke. Not when Marcus said he didn't love her but when her best friend, the girl who'd held her hair back during college parties and cried with her through her grandmother's funeral and been her maid of honor at a wedding that was now never going to happen, didn't pull away.
"Cassandra," her father said quietly, using her full name the way he only did in business meetings. "Let's go."
But Cassie's legs wouldn't cooperate.
Someone near the back shouted a question about the merger and someone else laughed. A photographer stepped closer and the flash went off directly in Cassie's face.
That broke the spell. Cassie ran.
She didn't care that running in four-inch heels was a death wish or that her dress cost more than most people's monthly rent and was now a blurred white obstacle around her legs. She didn't care that every single person in that ballroom was watching her flee like a wounded animal.
She just needed out.
The hallway outside the ballroom was blessedly empty, all the staff inside serving or recording history being made. Cassie's heels stumped frantically against the floor until she found a door, any door, and shoved it open.
But it was a coat room. Perfect!
She stumbled inside, slammed the door behind her, and locked it with shaking hands. The room smelled like expensive wool and cedar, racks of fur lining the walls because even the coats at a Hale event were worth more than cars.
Cassie braced herself against the door and tried to remember how to breathe.
In through the nose, out through the mouth.
In through the nose, out through—
But it wasn't working.
A sob tore out of her throat before she could stop it.
In seconds, everywhere went blur and she was sliding down the door until she hit the floor.
CHAPTER SEVENTY TWOPhysical therapy finally started. The therapist's name was David and he was professional and methodical and had no patience for Dom's attempts to push past what his body could do."You're going to damage the healing nerves," David said firmly when Dom tried to move his leg through a full range of motion during their first session. "We take this slow and steady. That's how recovery works.""I don't have time to take anything slow," Dom said. His jaw was tight, his hands gripping the bed rails."You have whatever time your body needs," David replied. "We're looking at four months minimum for you to walk without assistance. That's being conservative. You might need longer."Dom's expression didn't change, but Cassie felt something shift in the air around him."I'll do it in two months," he said quietly."That's not realistic…”"Two months," Dom repeated, cutting him off. "I'll push harder. I'll do the work but I'm not spending four months in this hospital."David loo
CHAPTER SEVENTY ONEShe sat there for hours, just holding his hand and downloading everything that had happened while he was out. She told him how her mother came to the hospital and her father showed up, destroying the small calm they had built with his anger and selfishness."There's something else," she said finally, because he deserved to know. "The car that hit us, it wasn't random. Someone did it deliberately. They wanted to..." She couldn't finish the sentence.But she could see in Dom's eyes that he understood. The fury that flashed across his face was so intense that for a moment he looked like a predator, dangerous and cold. He tried to move and gasped with pain, and Cassie immediately put her hand on his chest to keep him still."Don't. Please don't try to move. You're going to hurt yourself."But she could feel the tension in his body, the rage underneath the surface, the fact that he wanted to get out of this bed and find whoever had done this and destroy them. Now, even
CHAPTER SEVENTYDom made it through the surgery with flying colors and was showing signs of improvement. His brain was swelling less and his body was healing.Leo came into the room holding a tablet, his expression unreadable. He gestured for Cassie to follow him into the hallway."I have information," he said quietly. "About the accident."Cassie's heart rate picked up. "And?""The vehicle that hit you was a black SUV, registered to a shell company out of New Jersey but from the look of things, the company doesn't exactly exist. It's just a front. The investigator traced the financial transactions and found a burner phone was used to hire a driver for exactly twenty-four hours on the day of the accident.""Hire him to do what?" Cassie asked, though she already knew the answer."Hit your car. The investigator enhanced the highway footage and the impact trajectory shows it was aimed specifically at the passengers side. What made it look like a hit and run was the fact that after the hi
CHAPTER SIXTY NINE The waiting room was completely devoid of anything that might make a person feel better. Cassie sat in a plastic chair that squeaked when she moved, her leg bouncing up and down with a nervous energy she couldn't control.Leo paced. He'd been pacing for the last forty minutes, his phone in his hand, his jaw tight. Every few seconds he'd check the screen like the surgeon might text him an update instead of actually coming to tell them what was happening."It's been four hours," Cassie spoke quietly."Brain surgery takes time," Margaret said, squeezing her hand. "That's what the doctor said. He said it would take several hours.""But he said three to four hours. It's been four already.”"It's been four hours and fifteen minutes," she corrected gently. "And some of that time was preparation and positioning. The actual surgery time might still be within the expected window."Cassie nodded but the reassurance didn't help her stay still. Nothing did. She was suspended in
Cassie got out of bed and moved through her morning routine on autopilot. She showered and wore her new makeup, looking sharper than usual. That was her new armor for difficult conversations. Her hair was pulled back in her usual bun and she chose a black power suit from the new wardrobe Margot had
"I had my father's accountants walk me through the share transfer documents last week." Cassie kept her voice casual, watching Dom's reaction. "There's a clause we can activate. It's about fraud protection and asset security.""What kind of clause?""If we invoke it, the shares lock immediately. Th
Dom's office looked like a war room. Four different laptops were open on his desk, each showing different screens. His phone was on speaker, someone's voice droning about server access and metadata analysis. And in the center of it all, Dom sat in his desk chair, looking absolutely wrecked.His sh
Cassie lay on her bed, staring at the ceiling of her childhood bedroom. The events of the past week playing on repeat in her mind like a movie she couldn't turn off when her phone lit up on the nightstand. Dom's name flashed across the screen and Cassie turned away, pulling a pillow over her head.






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.