After Betrayal, She Claimed Her Empire
img img After Betrayal, She Claimed Her Empire img Chapter 2 No.2
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Chapter 7 No.7 img
Chapter 8 No.8 img
Chapter 9 No.9 img
Chapter 10 No.10 img
Chapter 11 No.11 img
Chapter 12 No.12 img
Chapter 13 No.13 img
Chapter 14 No.14 img
Chapter 15 No.15 img
Chapter 16 No.16 img
Chapter 17 No.17 img
Chapter 18 No.18 img
Chapter 19 No.19 img
Chapter 20 No.20 img
Chapter 21 No.21 img
Chapter 22 No.22 img
Chapter 23 No.23 img
Chapter 24 No.24 img
Chapter 25 No.25 img
Chapter 26 No.26 img
Chapter 27 No.27 img
Chapter 28 No.28 img
Chapter 29 No.29 img
Chapter 30 No.30 img
Chapter 31 No.31 img
Chapter 32 No.32 img
Chapter 33 No.33 img
Chapter 34 No.34 img
Chapter 35 No.35 img
Chapter 36 No.36 img
Chapter 37 No.37 img
Chapter 38 No.38 img
Chapter 39 No.39 img
Chapter 40 No.40 img
Chapter 41 No.41 img
Chapter 42 No.42 img
Chapter 43 No.43 img
Chapter 44 No.44 img
Chapter 45 No.45 img
Chapter 46 No.46 img
Chapter 47 No.47 img
Chapter 48 No.48 img
Chapter 49 No.49 img
Chapter 50 No.50 img
Chapter 51 No.51 img
Chapter 52 No.52 img
Chapter 53 No.53 img
Chapter 54 No.54 img
Chapter 55 No.55 img
Chapter 56 No.56 img
Chapter 57 No.57 img
Chapter 58 No.58 img
Chapter 59 No.59 img
Chapter 60 No.60 img
Chapter 61 No.61 img
Chapter 62 No.62 img
Chapter 63 No.63 img
Chapter 64 No.64 img
Chapter 65 No.65 img
Chapter 66 No.66 img
Chapter 67 No.67 img
Chapter 68 No.68 img
Chapter 69 No.69 img
Chapter 70 No.70 img
Chapter 71 No.71 img
Chapter 72 No.72 img
Chapter 73 No.73 img
Chapter 74 No.74 img
Chapter 75 No.75 img
Chapter 76 No.76 img
Chapter 77 No.77 img
Chapter 78 No.78 img
Chapter 79 No.79 img
Chapter 80 No.80 img
Chapter 81 No.81 img
Chapter 82 No.82 img
Chapter 83 No.83 img
Chapter 84 No.84 img
Chapter 85 No.85 img
Chapter 86 No.86 img
Chapter 87 No.87 img
Chapter 88 No.88 img
Chapter 89 No.89 img
Chapter 90 No.90 img
Chapter 91 No.91 img
Chapter 92 No.92 img
Chapter 93 No.93 img
Chapter 94 No.94 img
Chapter 95 No.95 img
Chapter 96 No.96 img
Chapter 97 No.97 img
Chapter 98 No.98 img
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Chapter 2 No.2

The morning light in the penthouse was aggressive. It flooded through the floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating dust motes that danced in the stagnant air.

Julian Sterling walked in at 8:00 AM. He was hungover. His head throbbed with a dull, rhythmic ache, a souvenir from the scotch at Obsidian. He loosened his tie, pulling it free from his collar with a groan.

He expected the smell. That cloying scent of cheap vanilla candles Serena insisted on burning. He expected the sound of her shuffling feet, the nervous clearing of her throat as she tried to gauge his mood.

Silence.

The apartment was dead silent.

"Serena?" he called out. His voice was raspy. He wasn't calling her because he cared; he needed his coffee. She always had it ready. Black, two sugars.

No answer.

He frowned. Irritation pricked at his skin. "Serena, don't play games. I have a meeting in an hour."

He walked into the kitchen. The counter was bare. The coffee machine was cold.

He walked down the hallway to the master bedroom. The door was ajar.

He pushed it open.

The first thing he saw was the light reflecting off the shards of glass on the floor.

Julian stopped. He stared at the vanity. The mirror was destroyed. A jagged hole gaped in the center, surrounded by a web of cracks. The smell of Chanel No. 5 was overpowering, mixing with the metallic scent of the destruction.

"What the hell..."

He stepped into the room, his shoes crunching on the glass.

He saw the nightstand.

The diamond necklace coiled like a snake. The wedding band, stained with a speck of dried blood. And the note.

He picked up the paper. The handwriting was neat, small. The trust fund is yours. My life is mine.

He read it twice. Then he laughed. A short, dry bark of a laugh.

"Dramatic," he muttered. "She's negotiating."

He tossed the note back onto the table. She had probably gone to her father's house. Or to some cheap hotel to wait for him to call and beg her to come back. She did this sometimes-small acts of rebellion that lasted less than twenty-four hours.

He pulled out his phone and dialed his lawyer.

"Where is the divorce draft?" Julian asked, rubbing his temples. "She's throwing a tantrum. I want to hit her with the papers while she's vulnerable."

There was a pause on the other end. A long, uncomfortable silence.

"Mr. Sterling," the lawyer said slowly. "Mrs. Sterling... Serena... she signed the digital waiver at 4:03 AM."

Julian froze. His hand stopped massaging his temple. "She what?"

"She initiated the filing. It was an uncontested waiver. She waived all rights to alimony, spousal support, and the marital assets. She signed a full NDA. She has done her part, sir."

Julian felt the floor tilt slightly. "She waived the assets?"

"Everything. She didn't take a dime. She even transferred her half of the joint checking account back to you. We just need your countersignature to file it with the court."

Julian lowered the phone. He looked around the room. The closet door was open. He walked over.

Her side of the closet was empty of the rags she wore around the house. But the rows of designer dresses, the furs, the bags he had his assistant buy to make her presentable for galas-they were all there. Tags still on.

She took nothing.

Why?

Serena Vance was a charity case. Her father hated her. She had no money, no job, no prospects. She needed him. She needed the Sterling name to survive in this city.

He felt a sudden, hollow sensation in his stomach. Loss of control. He hated losing control.

"Hold the filing," Julian said into the phone.

"Sir? But you wanted-"

"I said hold it!" Julian snapped. "Don't file anything until I find her. I need to know what game she's playing before I sign."

He hung up. If she was trying to manipulate him by leaving, she would learn that he was the master of this game. He wouldn't give her the satisfaction of a quick release until he looked her in the eye and saw the regret.

He dialed her cell phone.

The number you have dialed is no longer in service.

He stared at the screen.

His phone buzzed. It was Elena.

"Julian, baby," Elena's voice whined. "My car is making that noise again. And I saw the cutest bracelet at Cartier. Can you meet me for lunch?"

For the first time in three years, Julian felt a flash of irritation at the sound of her voice.

"Not now, Elena," he snapped.

"Excuse me?"

"I said not now." He hung up.

He called his personal assistant. "Track Serena's credit card. The black Amex. Tell me where she is."

Two minutes later, the assistant called back. "Sir, the card has been destroyed. The last transaction was a cab fare to Midtown at 11:30 PM. Since then, nothing. No hotel bookings, no flights under her name, no ATM withdrawals."

Julian paced the room. The crunch of glass under his feet was the only sound.

She was gone. Without a trace.

JFK International Airport. Terminal 4.

The VIP lounge was quiet, a sanctuary of beige leather and filtered air.

Serena sat in a corner chair. She wore oversized sunglasses that covered half her face and a black trench coat belted tightly at her waist.

A tall, elderly man in a pristine suit approached her. He carried a leather briefcase. He didn't look like a servant; he looked like a statesman.

"Miss Kensington," he said softly.

Serena looked up. It was the first time in three years someone had addressed her by her mother's maiden name. The name that carried more weight in Europe than Sterling did in New York.

"Alfred," she said. Her voice was steady, though her hands were cold.

"The jet is fueled and ready for Zurich," Alfred said. He placed a new passport on the table in front of her. The cover was dark blue. British.

"And the arrangements?"

"The clinic in Switzerland is expecting you. Dr. Gauthier is the best metabolic specialist in the world. He says the damage is reversible, but it will be painful."

"I don't care about pain," Serena said.

"And the plastic surgery consult?"

"No," Serena said sharply. She touched her cheek. "No plastic surgery. I want to heal the skin, not change the face. I want to look like me. The version of me they tried to kill."

Alfred nodded, a gleam of respect in his eyes. "Very good, Miss."

He held out his hand. "Your phone, please."

Serena handed him the burner.

"And the other one?"

"Left in a trash can on 5th Avenue."

Alfred took the burner phone. "I will dispose of this securely." He gestured to a nearby security detail. Two men in suits stepped forward. One took her battered suitcase.

"We will handle the luggage, Miss. You won't need those clothes where you are going. Everything has been provided."

Serena looked at the suitcase as the guard wheeled it away. It contained the last remnants of Serena Vance, the unwanted daughter, the unloved wife.

She stood up.

She turned and walked toward the gate. She didn't look back at the suitcase. She didn't look back at the skyline of New York visible through the massive windows.

She walked onto the tarmac. The wind whipped her hair, but the rain had stopped.

She boarded the Gulfstream G650. The interior was cream and gold.

She sat in a window seat. As the plane began to taxi, she felt the vibration of the engines in her bones.

Julian was probably waking up now. He was probably angry. He was probably looking for someone to blame. But he wouldn't file the papers immediately. She knew him. He was possessive. He would want to find her first, to win.

Let him look. By the time he realized she was truly gone, she would be a ghost.

The plane roared, picking up speed. The force pushed her back into the seat.

She watched the ground fall away. The cars became ants. The buildings became toys. The penthouse was just a speck of dust in a dirty city.

"Goodbye, Julian Sterling," she whispered against the cold glass. "You won't recognize me next time."

The plane banked sharp right, disappearing into the clouds.

            
            

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