LOGIN“You are already divorced, Maya. You signed the papers two months ago. You just didn’t read them.” For eight years, Maya Mason endured a loveless marriage of convenience to billionaire Mason Hargrove, three miscarriages, endless sacrifices, and quiet devotion, only to discover betrayal on their anniversary…. Her husband’s affair with her best friend Selina, who’s now four months pregnant with his heir. In one devastating afternoon, Mason reveals he tricked her into signing divorce papers, strips her of her project, and lets Selina claim everything. Maya drops her rings, resigns, and walks away, owning forty-nine percent of the empire he thought was his alone. Enter Alexander Voss, Mason’s charismatic rival and the man who once saw Maya’s true worth. As Mason scrambles to chase the wife he discarded, Maya builds a new life, and a new future with the one person who never underestimated her. A steamy billionaire romance of betrayal, divorce, revenge, redemption, and a scorching second-chance love that proves some hearts are worth fighting for, after they’ve already been broken.
View MoreMaya’s POV
“She is two months pregnant.”
“I can’t believe it,” Mason’s voice carried through the cracked boardroom door, low and reverent, the way he used to speak to me only in our earliest days before the miscarriages, before the silence grew between us like frost on glass.
“Two months?”
My fingers tightened on the door handle until my knuckles bleached white. I’d come to drop off the revised merger documents myself instead of sending my assistant. A small gesture. A wife’s gesture. Now I couldn’t move
Dr. Hargrove answered, calm and clinical as always. “Yes, Mr. Mason. The hCG levels and ultrasound are conclusive. She’s eight weeks pregnant.”
A soft exhale, almost a laugh slipped from Selina.
My Selina. My best friend since college, the one who’d held my hair back while I vomited through fertility drugs, who’d brought lavender candles to the hospital after each D&C, who’d whispered “next time” like a prayer every time my body failed me again.
Silence stretched, thick and intimate
Then the unmistakable sound: lips against skin. Slow. Tender. Celebratory.
My knees nearly buckled.
I slid sideways, pressing my back to the marble wall beside the double doors, hidden by the tall fiddle-leaf fig that Mason insisted on keeping in every executive space because “it looks expensive.” My silk blouse stuck to my spine with sudden sweat.
“How do you feel, love?” Mason asked her, his voice dropping to that velvet register he reserved for boardroom victories and bedroom promises he no longer kept with me.
“Terrified,” Selina admitted, a tremor beneath her usual confidence. “But happy. So happy. We’ve waited so long for this”
Waited….
The word sliced clean through me.
Mason My husband has been having an affair with my bestfriend….
Mason chuckled softly, indulgent, the sound I hadn’t heard directed at me in years. “Every time she lost one, I told myself maybe we weren’t meant to have children together. But you…” His voice lowered further, almost worshipful. “You were always the one”
I clamped my hand over my mouth so hard my teeth bit into my palm.
Almost Eight years.
Eight years of basal body thermometers at 5 a.m., of scheduled sex that felt like clinical appointments, of negative pregnancy tests that landed like verdicts. Eight years of watching his jaw tighten with every doctor’s “I’m sorry.” Eight years of believing, if I just tried harder, sacrificed more, loved deeper…. he would finally look at me the way he once promised he would
And through every loss, Selina had been my rock
She’d sat with me on cold bathroom tiles at 3 a.m., rubbing my back while I sobbed that my body hated me. She’d fielded calls from nosy relatives so I wouldn’t have to explain another failure. She’d told me Mason adored me, that men just didn’t know how to show it when they were hurting too…
Lies.
All of it
I remembered the night I introduced them, my twenty-third birthday, rooftop bar overlooking the harbor. Selina had arrived in a crimson dress that clung like sin, hair tumbling loose, skin glowing under the string lights. Mason’s gaze had snagged on her and stayed. I’d laughed, looped my arm through hers, said, “Isn’t she stunning?” like a fool proud of her beautiful friend.
He’d never denied it
Not once.
Our marriage had never been about romance. Our fathers…. best friends since boarding school, had engineered it when both family empires teetered on collapse. Mason’s shipping conglomerate needed my father’s logistics network and capital. My father needed Mason’s ruthless expansion strategy to survive. Together they became untouchable
I became the bride in white lace who smiled for the cameras and signed the prenup without complaint.
I told myself convenience could grow into love. That if I poured enough of myself into the company, learning the routes, memorizing the ledgers, charming the Chinese investors at 2 a.m. conference calls…..he would see my devotion and choose me anyway.
He never did.
He looked at me with polite tolerance at best, quiet disdain at worst.
And all the while, he looked at her.
Then thr boardroom door opened
I shrank deeper into the shadow of the plant, heart slamming against my ribs.
“I’ll walk you down,” Mason said. “We have to be discreet. No one can know yet.”
“Of course.” Selina’s voice was soft, conspiratorial.
The word landed like a guillotine.
Their footsteps approached, his measured, commanding; hers lighter, confident. They passed within arm’s reach. I smelled her jasmine perfume tangled with his cedar-and-bergamot cologne, the same scent that used to cling to his shirts when he came home after “late meetings.”
They didn’t glance my way….
Why would they? I’d spent years making myself small enough to disappear.
As their voices faded toward the private elevator, I stayed frozen, breath shallow.
My phone vibrated, my assistant, probably wondering why I hadn’t appeared for the branding presentation. I ignored it.
Tears burned tracks down my cheeks, but I didn’t sob. Not here. Not where someone might hear or see me.
I waited until the corridor was silent, then slipped away, tiptoeing like a thief in my own husband’s empire.
The service elevator carried me to the underground garage. No one used it except the maintenance staff. No cameras. No witnesses.
In the dim fluorescent light, I leaned against the cold concrete wall and finally let the sobs come out ugly, wrenching, soundless gasps that shook my whole body.
Almost eight years of loyalty to a marriage not built on love but hope.
Ten years of friendship to Selina.
Both of them thrown away like yesterday’s financials.
I thought of the pale-yellow nursery I’d painted in secret after our second pregnancy, the crib still boxed in storage because I’d been too afraid to assemble it after the third loss.
I thought of every time Selina hugged me and promised, “You’ll have your miracle”
She’d been planning her own, to snatch my husband…
The elevator dinged at the garage level. I stepped out, heels echoing in the empty space.
I needed silence. I needed air. I needed to think.
Because this wasn’t the end of my story.
This was the moment their fairy tale cracked open.
Selina's POVThe hotel room had become unbearable by the third day.... Not physically though, the room was fine.... The bed was good. The blackout curtains were excellent.What was unbearable was the screenI had told myself I would stop reading the coverage at noon on the first day. Then at six on the second day. Each time the resolution lasted approximately forty minutes before the specific, compulsive pull of watching your own life being discussed by people who had never met you overwhelmed whatever discipline I had available.By the third morning, I had stopped pretending I was going to stop.I read it all....Every article. Every comment thread. Every think piece that used my name as a data point in an argument about women who destroyed other women....They were not wrong.That was the thing I kept arriving at and kept moving past... they were not wrong. The clinic records were accurate. The consultations had happened. The payments were mine. Daniel Cole had not f
Zara's POVThe photographs arrived at two in the afternoon.Fourteen of them, sent through the secure channel I used for work I didn't want connected to my name. My contact had been thorough... I had received documentation from my private investigator, through a secured channel I believe was trustworthy....I set my laptop on the kitchen table, poured coffee I wouldn't drink, and opened the files.Maya and a manAnyone who did not know what the meeting was would not know what the meeting was.That was the first thing I understood, looking at the photographs.The second thing I understood was that this was the best opportunity I had been handed since I arrived in this city.I worked methodically.Not from excitement.... I had learned, across the years I had spent in professional environments that required precision, that excitement was the enemy of craft. Excitement made you move too fast. Excitement made you skip the verification step, the second look, the moment
Zara's POVAn idea was taking a root in my head immediately I left Alex's ward.The idea had not left me overnight.What if Alex wakes up from coma with an Retrograde amnesia. Not able to remember everything, especially Maya.I woke up at six and it was exactly where I had left it, sitting in the front of my mind....What if Alex woke up differently.What if there was a way to influence what he can remember or forget.I lay in bed for forty minutes running it forward.I was not naive about medicine.I understood, from the reading I had done and from the conversation I had had with myself in the hospital corridor, that retrograde amnesia was not a switch. You could not engineer a specific gap. You could not tell a brain what to retain and what to release. The process was not available to anyone standing outside it.But I was also not naive about influence.Influence was not the same thing as engineering. Influence operated at the margins, in the spaces around the thing rather
Zara's POVThe security on Alex's floor was heavier than it had been.I had noticed this on my previous visit.... Someone had redesigned the access after the IV incident. Someone competent.I had been watching the floor pattern for two days.There was a window between the eleven-fifteen nursing handover and the eleven-forty security rotation where the specific corridor leading to Alex's room had a gap. Not a long one. Twelve minutes, perhaps fifteen.Enough...The room was exactly as I had last seen it from the corridor.Alex.I closed the door behind meStood for a moment with my back to it, looking at him.He looked better than heb had in the first days.... I crossed to the chair beside the bedSat down.I had told myself, in the car, that I was coming to see that he was all right. It was a plausible reason. A human reason.Sitting beside him now, in the quiet, with no Maya and no family and no medical staff requiring me to perform a register I had not brought
Zara's POV The blood left my face. I felt it go... And Mason Hargrove standing in the doorway.... "What do you want?" I said. He moved into the corridor properly... the specific, deliberate movement of someone choosing to occupy a
Maya's POVThe hospital was exactly as cold as I remembered it.Not the temperature..... but as a place designed for crisis, where the lighting was consistent regardless of hour and the floors were the colour of something that needed to be cleaned easily and the sounds we
Maya's POV The garden went wrong in the space of three seconds. I would replay those three seconds for a long time afterward.... not because replaying them changed anything, but because the mind did what the mind did with the moments that restructured eve
Maya's POV The dress was the right dress. I knew it the moment I stood in front of the mirror at seven in the morning with Catherine beside me and Olive doing something precise with the buttons at the back and the light coming through the east-faci












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