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img img Modern img My Marriage License, His Public Fall
My Marriage License, His Public Fall

My Marriage License, His Public Fall

img Modern
img 17 Chapters
img Gavin
5.0
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About

For five years, I was the secret wife of billionaire Chace Bentley, hiding in the shadows because he swore it was the only way to protect me from his ruthless family. But when his security guards dragged me out of his gala by my hair, breaking my ribs while the crowd jeered at the "delusional stalker," Chace didn't save me. He stood on the balcony, smoking a cigarette, and watched me bleed with cold, dead eyes. I thought I had hit rock bottom in that jail cell, until I found the documents in his safe. A prenuptial agreement with a socialite named Celina. And a trust fund for their future children. When I confronted him, he didn't beg for forgiveness. He laughed. "Everything you own, the clothes on your back, the roof over your head, it's all because of me. My charity." He thought he had broken me. He thought I was just a disposable pawn in his rise to power. But he forgot that I still held the one thing that could destroy him: our original marriage license. On the day of his grand engagement announcement, I didn't hide. I walked onto the stage, took the microphone, and introduced myself to the world. "I'm Gracelyn Weeks, and I'm Chace Bentley's wife."

Chapter 1

For five years, I was the secret wife of billionaire Chace Bentley, hiding in the shadows because he swore it was the only way to protect me from his ruthless family.

But when his security guards dragged me out of his gala by my hair, breaking my ribs while the crowd jeered at the "delusional stalker," Chace didn't save me.

He stood on the balcony, smoking a cigarette, and watched me bleed with cold, dead eyes.

I thought I had hit rock bottom in that jail cell, until I found the documents in his safe.

A prenuptial agreement with a socialite named Celina.

And a trust fund for their future children.

When I confronted him, he didn't beg for forgiveness.

He laughed.

"Everything you own, the clothes on your back, the roof over your head, it's all because of me. My charity."

He thought he had broken me.

He thought I was just a disposable pawn in his rise to power.

But he forgot that I still held the one thing that could destroy him: our original marriage license.

On the day of his grand engagement announcement, I didn't hide.

I walked onto the stage, took the microphone, and introduced myself to the world.

"I'm Gracelyn Weeks, and I'm Chace Bentley's wife."

Chapter 1

Gracelyn POV:

The world blurred around me, a dizzying kaleidoscope of flashing lights and gaping faces. My arms were wrenched behind my back, a searing pain blooming where the security guard' s thick fingers dug into my flesh. One moment, I was standing on the periphery of the Bentley annual gala, trying to catch Chace' s eye, the next, I was being manhandled toward the ornate double doors, my feet barely touching the ground.

"Get off me!" I shrieked, my voice thin and reedy against the roar of the crowd. It was a futile protest. Their grip tightened, impersonal and brutal.

My body slammed against a marble pillar, the impact stealing my breath. A sharp gasp escaped my lips, but it was lost in the growing murmur of the horrified (or entertained) onlookers. My head throbbed, a dull ache spreading from my temples to the base of my skull. I felt a cold dread creep through my veins, colder than the New York winter night seeping in from the open doors.

"Trespassing. Violating a restraining order," a voice droned, clipped and emotionless. It was the head of Bentley security, a man whose face I knew better than my own. He looked at me with cold, dead eyes, as if I were a piece of trash to be disposed of. How could he not know me? How could he not remember all the times he' d let me in, no questions asked, when Chace and I stole moments together?

The words hit me harder than the impact with the pillar. A restraining order. Against me. Chace' s wife. The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth, metallic and acrid. I was being arrested, publicly humiliated, for trying to see my husband. My secret husband.

"She's sick," someone whispered, close enough for me to hear. "Delusional."

"The Bentley Stalker," another voice hissed, followed by the cruel, high-pitched giggle of a woman. It wasn't just whispers anymore. The words cascaded around me, a torrent of judgment and scorn. "Look at her, trying to ruin his night." "Disgusting. Some people have no shame." "She probably thinks she's his wife, how pathetic."

My vision swam, tears pricking at my eyes, threatening to spill. Every word was a tiny needle, pricking at the flimsy shield I' d built around my heart over the past five years. Five years of living in the shadows, of being branded a crazy stalker, all for Chace. For us.

I fought against the guards, a desperate, animalistic struggle. Not because I thought I could escape, but because the alternative was to simply let them drag me away, confirming every hateful word the crowd was spitting. My designer dress, a gift from Chace, was ripped at the seams. My hair, painstakingly styled, was now a wild, tangled mess.

Suddenly, my eyes found him. Chace. He stood on a balcony overlooking the ballroom, a cigarette glowing faintly between his fingers, its smoke curling into the dim light. His jaw was tight, his gaze fixed on nothing in particular, certainly not on me. His face was a mask of calculated indifference. His eyes, usually so vibrant and full of a dangerous charm, were cold, distant, like two chips of ice. He watched me, his wife, being dragged through the public square, and did nothing. Absolutely nothing.

He took a slow drag from his cigarette, then casually flicked his wrist. His assistant, a young woman with a perpetually anxious expression, appeared at his side. I saw his lips move. He didn' t even glance my way. Just a low, murmuring instruction, then another indifferent drag. My heart, already bruised and battered, shattered into a million pieces. He wouldn't bail me out. He wouldn't even acknowledge my existence. He would just tell someone to "handle it."

The security guards finally wrestled me through the doors and into the biting cold. The flash of paparazzi cameras was blinding, the shouts of reporters an unbearable din. My name, Gracelyn Weeks, was screamed, twisted into something ugly and contemptible. The cold air bit into my exposed skin, but the chill that settled deep in my bones was from Chace's gaze, or rather, his lack of it.

After what felt like an eternity, but was probably only minutes, I was shoved into the back of a police cruiser. The doors slammed shut, muffling the chaos outside, but not the deafening silence inside my own head. My wrists were cuffed, digging into my skin. The metal was cold, unforgiving.

I stared out the window, watching the glittering city lights recede, each one a painful reminder of the life I was supposed to be a part of, the life Chace and I were supposed to build. But it was all a lie, wasn't it? A carefully constructed facade, behind which I was merely a phantom, a ghost to be erased.

The police station was sterile, impersonal. The fluorescent lights hummed, casting a sickly yellow glow on the chipped linoleum floor. My head still throbbed, a drumbeat of pain echoing the emptiness in my chest. They took my fingerprints, my mugshot. The officer behind the desk seemed to enjoy her job a little too much, a smirk playing on her lips as she read out the charges. Trespassing, disturbing the peace, violating a restraining order. Each word a fresh wound.

"Can I make a call?" I asked, my voice barely a whisper. My throat was raw, my eyes burning.

The officer raised an eyebrow, a clear sign of disbelief. "Who would you possibly call?" she scoffed, her tone dripping with disdain. "Your 'husband'?" She made air quotes around the word, her smirk widening. The other officers in the room chuckled.

I flinched, but quickly composed myself. "Chace Bentley," I said, my voice gaining a desperate edge. "He'll clear this up. He'll explain."

The officer burst out laughing, a harsh, grating sound. "Honey, Chace Bentley is currently at a gala with his fiancée, Celina McNeil. He's not exactly waiting by the phone for you."

The words hit me like a physical blow. Celina McNeil. Always Celina. My stomach churned. "Fiancée?" I repeated, the word tasting like ash. "But... we're married. I'm his wife."

She rolled her eyes. "Right, and I'm the Queen of England. Look, lady, we've had enough of your delusional ramblings for one night. He has a restraining order against you. You're going to spend the night in a cell, and then you can figure out how to explain this to the judge."

My mind reeled, a whirlwind of past promises and present betrayals. Five years. Five years of this secret. Five years of being Chace' s hidden wife, the woman he swore he loved, the woman he swore he was protecting from his ruthless family. Five years of being told it was all temporary, until he gained full control, until we could be together, openly.

He had promised me, on our wedding day, a private ceremony in a small chapel, that this secrecy was for our safety. His father, Barron Harvey, the patriarch of the Bentley empire, was a man who saw marriage as a business merger. Anyone who threatened the family legacy would be eliminated. Chace had made me believe that this public humiliation, this "stalker" narrative, was a shield. A way to make me seem insignificant, harmless, so his father wouldn't view me as a threat.

"It's just for a little while, Gracelyn," he'd whispered, his hand tracing the curve of my jaw, his eyes full of what I thought was genuine love. "Just until I solidify my position. Then, we'll tell the world. Our world."

I had believed him. I, the orphan who grew up in the foster care system, who had finally found someone who saw beyond my past, someone who promised me a future. I had endured the online bullying, the whispers, the snide remarks, the physical removals by his security teams. Each time, I told myself it was for love. For us.

But Celina McNeil. The socialite, media darling, heiress. She was always there, publicly by his side, fueling the "stalker" narrative with her knowing glances and carefully worded statements. I knew she knew about me. She enjoyed the power play, the twisted game. She wanted to be Mrs. Bentley, and she didn't care who she had to crush to get there.

Now, a fiancée? This wasn't protection. This was replacement. This was Chace building a life without me, a life he had sworn was ours. All those years, all those sacrifices, all the pain I had swallowed, were for nothing. He wasn't protecting me. He was abusing me. And I was finally, truly, breaking.

The cold hard bench in the cell felt like a tomb. The air was thick with the smell of disinfectant and despair. I curled into a ball, my body aching, my heart a hollow space in my chest. The image of Chace, cool and detached on the balcony, flicking his cigarette, replayed in my mind. He hadn't even looked. Not once.

It was over. Everything was over.

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