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img img Billionaires img The Red Queen's Spectacular Rise After Betrayal
The Red Queen's Spectacular Rise After Betrayal

The Red Queen's Spectacular Rise After Betrayal

img Billionaires
img 50 Chapters
img Shen Xiyan
5.0
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About

For five years, I was the woman in the shadows, the secret partner Evander Mathews promised to marry once his company was stable. On our fifth anniversary, I waited in our Manhattan penthouse with chilled wine, only for him to leave abruptly for what he called a "merger emergency." In his haste, he left his wall safe open. Inside, I found a marriage contract signed three days ago. The groom was Evander, but the bride was my sister, Daneen. Then came the message that shattered my world-a photo of their hands intertwined and a text from my sister. "Sister, thank you for borrowing him for five years. But he is home now." I looked at the rows of white silk dresses in my closet and finally understood the truth. I was never his lover; I was a living memorial, a placeholder he had curated to look and smell exactly like the sister who had spent our childhood abusing me. He knew about the scars on my back, yet he was choosing the woman who gave them to me. When Evander sent his assistant the next morning to pay me off with a diamond necklace, he expected me to disappear. He thought the girl he had kept hidden for half a decade would never have the courage to step into the light. He was wrong. I grabbed the fabric scissors, hacked off the long hair he adored, and dialed a number I had kept hidden for years. "I'm ready to collect that favor," I said to the man on the other end. "Get me into the gala tonight. I'm going to show them exactly what they tried to bury."

Chapter 1 1

The condensation on the wine glass was the only thing moving in the room. Gisele Mueller stood before the floor-to-ceiling window of the Manhattan penthouse, the city lights below blurring into a stream of gold and red that looked nothing like freedom. It was their fifth anniversary. Five years of being the woman in the shadows, the secret muse, the partner Evander Mathews promised he would claim publicly once the board stabilized.

The bathroom door clicked open. Steam rolled out, carrying the scent of cedar and expensive soap. Evander walked into the living room, a towel low on his hips, water droplets tracing the defined lines of his abdomen. Gisele felt that familiar pull in her chest, a physical ache that she had mistaken for love for half a decade. She turned, lifting the two crystal glasses she had poured ten minutes ago.

He took the glass. His fingers brushed against hers. The contact was electric, a jolt that traveled up her arm and settled heavily in her stomach. He smiled, that rare, soft smile reserved only for this apartment, and pulled her toward the Italian leather sofa. The leather was cool against her legs as they sat, the silence comfortable, heavy with the promise of the night. He kissed her, tasting of mint and red wine, his hand sliding under the hem of her silk dress.

The phone on the marble coffee table buzzed.

It wasn't a ring. It was a violent vibration against the stone, a harsh, mechanical intrusion. Evander froze. His hand stopped moving on her thigh. He pulled back, his eyes shifting from her face to the screen. The name flashing there was innocent enough: "Dr. Lewis."

But the air in the room shifted. The temperature seemed to drop ten degrees. Evander's pupils contracted. He stood up abruptly, the towel almost slipping, his demeanor shifting from lover to CEO in the span of a heartbeat.

Sorry, he said, his voice clipped. It is the company. An emergency with the merger.

Gisele felt the rejection like a physical blow to her solar plexus. She set her wine glass down, her hand trembling slightly. Tonight is our fifth anniversary, Evander. Can it not wait?

He was already walking toward the study. He didn't look back. Don't be difficult, Gisele. This is important.

He closed the study door. The lock clicked.

Gisele sat alone on the sprawling sofa. She looked at the lipstick stain on the rim of her glass. It looked like a wound. The silence of the penthouse was deafening now, amplified by the sudden absence of his warmth. She waited. Her mind replayed the look in his eyes when he saw the phone. It wasn't concern for business. It was guilt.

Ten minutes later, Evander emerged. He was fully dressed in a charcoal suit, his tie perfectly knotted. He walked over and kissed her forehead, a dry, perfunctory gesture that felt more like a dismissal than affection.

Go to sleep, he said, checking his watch. Don't wait up.

The front door closed with a heavy thud. The lock engaged.

Gisele sat there for another hour. The wine turned warm. The city lights outside seemed to mock her. Finally, the need to do something, anything, other than drown in her own anxiety forced her up. She walked into the study. He had left in such a rush. Usually, he was meticulous, but tonight, the room felt chaotic.

She moved to the desk to organize the files for his morning briefing, a habit born of five years of acting as his unofficial assistant. That was when she saw it. The wall safe behind the painting was not flush with the wall. The digital panel was dark, but the heavy steel door was ajar by a fraction of an inch.

He had been distracted. He had been panicked.

Gisele reached out. Her fingers felt numb. She shouldn't look. She knew she shouldn't look. But her hand moved of its own accord, pulling the heavy door open. Inside, amidst stacks of cash and bonds, lay a single blue folder. A yellow sticky note was attached to the front: "Finalized - Priority."

She pulled it out. The paper felt heavy, substantial. The cover page bore the seal of the State of New York. "Draft - Premarital Asset Allocation & Engagement Contract."

The air left her lungs.

She flipped the page. The groom's signature was sharp, aggressive: Evander Mathews. Her eyes dragged across the page to the beneficiary's line. She expected a blank space. She expected a draft.

The signature was looping, childish, familiar. Daneen Mueller.

The date was three days ago. The day Evander had told her he was in Chicago for a tech conference.

The folder slipped from her fingers. It hit the plush carpet without a sound, but to Gisele, the impact shattered the world. She fell to her knees, her hands scrambling to pick it up, to reread it, to find the mistake. There was no mistake. Behind the contract was a detailed itinerary for a "Proposal Gala." It outlined media strategies, ring selection, and titles. It referred to Daneen as the "Mathews Matriarch."

Gisele's name was nowhere.

She was the ghost. She had always been the ghost.

Her phone on the desk buzzed. A text from Evander. Won't be back tonight. Complications with the acquisition.

Gisele read the words. A dry, jagged sound ripped from her throat. It was a laugh, devoid of humor. Acquisition. That was what this was. He had acquired the sister with the status, while keeping the sister with the talent in the dark.

She shoved the papers back into the safe. She wiped the handle with the hem of her dress. She closed the painting. She walked into the bathroom and stared at the mirror. The woman looking back was pale, her eyes wide and hollow. She didn't scream. She didn't break the mirror. She just turned on the tap and washed her hands, scrubbing them until the skin turned red, trying to wash off five years of lies.

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