His Manipulation, Her Undoing, His End

His Manipulation, Her Undoing, His End

Xiao Wang

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My fiancé thought he was manipulating a naive heiress, unaware I had video proof of him plotting to commit me to an asylum. He planned to steal my inheritance with my cousin, but tonight, I' m not signing a marriage license. I' m signing his death warrant. For years, I played the role of the docile, grateful orphan while Holden and Dianne mocked me behind my back. They called me mentally incompetent, laughing as they planned to strip me of my father' s legacy and lock me away. I watched them parade around my birthday gala, smug in their victory, treating me like a fragile doll on the verge of a breakdown. They expected tears. They expected submission. Instead, they got a cold-blooded execution. In front of the entire New York elite, I didn't hand my voting rights to the golden boy who promised to love me. I walked past him and handed the charter to the one man the entire family feared. Hazen Ingram. The scarred, silent "monster" of the dynasty. As Holden screamed and was dragged away by security, I realized something terrifyingly beautiful. I didn't just choose revenge. I chose the only man who ever truly protected me.

Chapter 1

My fiancé thought he was manipulating a naive heiress, unaware I had video proof of him plotting to commit me to an asylum.

He planned to steal my inheritance with my cousin, but tonight, I' m not signing a marriage license.

I' m signing his death warrant.

For years, I played the role of the docile, grateful orphan while Holden and Dianne mocked me behind my back.

They called me mentally incompetent, laughing as they planned to strip me of my father' s legacy and lock me away.

I watched them parade around my birthday gala, smug in their victory, treating me like a fragile doll on the verge of a breakdown.

They expected tears. They expected submission.

Instead, they got a cold-blooded execution.

In front of the entire New York elite, I didn't hand my voting rights to the golden boy who promised to love me.

I walked past him and handed the charter to the one man the entire family feared.

Hazen Ingram.

The scarred, silent "monster" of the dynasty.

As Holden screamed and was dragged away by security, I realized something terrifyingly beautiful.

I didn't just choose revenge.

I chose the only man who ever truly protected me.

Chapter 1

Cleo Kline POV:

The laughter died in my throat, choked by the sickening reality on the screen. Holden, my Holden, his arm around Dianne, his voice a venomous whisper discussing my "mental incompetence." My father' s will, my inheritance, my entire future – all to be neatly plucked from my grasp. The private camera I' d set up, a desperate, childish act of suspicion, had yielded absolute, undeniable proof. My life before this moment felt like a cheap romance novel, starring a naive heroine and a prince who was nothing more than a wolf in cashmere. Now, the old Cleo was dead. And what shocked me wasn't the death, but the cold, clear absence of grief.

I made a different choice. A silent vow, etched onto my soul, to make them pay. The surprise wasn't that they betrayed me. The surprise was my own calm. My own utter lack of tears.

Days later, the air in the Ingram Gallery was heavy with the perfume of money and ambition. Crystal chandeliers dripped light onto polished marble. My heels clicked, a lonely sound in the murmuring crowd. I spotted him instantly. Holden. He stood near a sculpture, his golden hair catching the light, his smile dazzling the socialites around him. Dianne was draped over his arm, her laugh a tinkling bell that always grated on my nerves.

They looked like royalty. A prince and his chosen princess.

He saw me. His smile tightened, a flicker of annoyance in his eyes. He leaned down, whispering something to Dianne. Her gaze darted to me, then she giggled, hiding her face in Holden' s shoulder like a shy child. They always did that. Made me feel like an outsider, a ghost at my own feast.

Someone bumped a tray of champagne flutes near them. A single glass wobbled, then fell. It shattered on the marble floor, a sharp, sudden crack that silenced the room for a breath.

Holden' s gaze snapped to me. His voice, usually so charming, cut through the quiet. "Cleo, darling, would you mind having one of the staff clean that up? You' re closer."

The suggestion was a command. A familiar one. It always came with that indulgent, superior tone. I was always the one to "handle things." To smooth over inconveniences. To maintain the illusion of his perfect world.

A ripple went through the crowd. Eyes turned to me. Some sympathetic, some curious, most just waiting to see if the little orphan girl would jump to her master's command, as always. They always watched. They always knew my role. The docile heiress, grateful for her place in the Ingram household.

A bitter taste filled my mouth. It was a familiar taste, a blend of humiliation and forgotten self-worth. How many times had I scurried, heart pounding, to fulfill his slightest whim? How many times had I tried to earn his approval, his love? It was a painful echo. The "old Cleo" would have blushed, stammered, and called for a waiter. The "old Cleo" was a fool.

I didn't move. I didn't even blink. "No, Holden," I said, my voice clear and steady, surprising even myself. The sound was like a tiny shard of glass, cutting through the silence.

His smile vanished. His jaw tightened. "Excuse me?" His voice was low, dangerous.

"I said no," I repeated. My eyes met his, unblinking. "I won't be cleaning up your mess, Holden. Not anymore."

The silence in the gallery was deafening. It felt like the air had been sucked out of the room. Every pair of eyes was on us. The shock was palatable.

Holden's face flushed crimson. His charm, his carefully constructed facade, cracked. "Cleo, are you feeling alright?" he asked, his voice laced with venom. He didn't ask if I was alright. He was asking if I was insane. "You've been acting rather peculiar lately. Distracted."

A few titters broke the silence. Whispers followed. "Poor Cleo. Always been a bit... delicate." "Holden will have his hands full, won't he?" The words were like a chorus, reminding me of my perceived fragility, my long-held reputation as the "doormat."

Just then, Dianne, who had watched our exchange with wide, innocent eyes, swayed slightly. She clutched her head. "Oh, my head...," she murmured, a hand pressed to her temple. "I just ran into that dreadful pillar. So clumsy of me."

Holden immediately dropped his gaze from me, his anger shifting to concern. He put an arm around her, steadying her. "Dianne, darling! Are you alright? You need to be more careful." He turned his stormy gaze back to me. "Cleo, look what you've done. You've upset Dianne with your erratic behavior. She's delicate."

Dianne leaned heavily into him, her face pale. "It's nothing, Holden," she whispered, her voice barely audible. "Just a little dizzy spell. I'm afraid the excitement... and perhaps Cleo's sudden outburst..." She let the sentence hang, implying the rest.

Holden's grip on Dianne tightened. His eyes, usually so warm and inviting, were now cold steel. "Cleo, you know Dianne isn't as robust as you are. She's been through a lot. Your insensitivity is appalling." He paused, his voice dropping to a theatrical whisper that still carried across the room. "Unless, of course, this is all part of some misguided attempt to... what? Steal my attention? You know I'm committed to Dianne, despite your lingering... affections."

He paused again, letting the implications hang in the air like a foul odor. "Trying to win me back with dramatics? Cleo, please. It's beneath you. And frankly, it's making you look quite unhinged."

He smirked, a cruel twist of his lips. "Perhaps you're hoping to stir up some sympathy, Cleo? A desperate play for pity, now that the Ingram board is making some rather... unfavorable changes to your father's legacy?" He leaned in, his voice dropping, but I heard every word. "You always were so good at playing the victim, weren' t you? Just like your father, always trying to manipulate situations to get what you want."

My breath hitched. My father. They always went there. My mind flashed to the video, to Holden mocking my father' s sacrifice. To him planning to declare me incompetent. The betrayal burned, a fresh wound. But a new strength, cold and sharp, rose from the ashes of my old self.

I smiled. It wasn' t a pretty smile. It was a predator' s smile. "Oh, Holden," I said, my voice dangerously soft. "You misunderstand. My affections are quite settled. And as for the Ingram board..." I let my gaze sweep across the stunned faces of the socialites, lingering on a few key older men who looked openly curious. "Let's just say some people are more aware of the true state of affairs than others."

A murmur, louder this time, swept through the room. Elsworth Ingram, the patriarch, had been very quiet about certain board discussions. Any hint of inside information was gold.

Holden's eyes narrowed. "What are you talking about?" he demanded, a hint of genuine unease in his voice.

"I' m talking about how well-informed some of us are about the upcoming gala, Holden," I said, my voice carrying just enough for the key players to hear. "And the real purpose behind tonight's gathering. How certain voting blocks are about to be... realigned. Isn't that right, Mr. Henderson?" I nodded subtly to an elderly board member who now looked visibly uncomfortable and avoided Holden' s gaze.

The murmuring intensified. People began to shift, glancing between Holden and me with newfound speculation. The smiles of some of Holden's sycophants faltered. They now looked at me with a calculating glint in their eyes.

Holden' s face was a mask of confusion and something akin to fear. Dianne, still clutching his arm, looked equally lost. His carefully constructed air of effortless superiority was crumbling.

"Cleo, you're spouting nonsense," Holden hissed, trying to regain control. His arm tightened around Dianne, pulling her closer, as if to ward off my words. He forced a condescending smile. "You always did have a vivid imagination. Don't let it run away with you, darling. You know how easily you can get carried away. Remember when you ran away from your debutante ball, convinced someone was following you? So dramatic."

A cold shiver ran down my spine. That night. I remembered it perfectly. The fear, the panic. The feeling of being watched. I glanced at Holden, a sudden, unnerving thought taking root. Did he know something about that night? Or was he just weaponizing my past vulnerability?

Holden, satisfied he' d landed a blow, tightened his grip on Dianne. He turned his back to me, dismissing me. "Come, Dianne. Let's find somewhere quieter. This clearly isn't the place for us." He began to escort her away, leaving me standing alone amidst the shattered glass and the buzzing whispers.

The crowd watched them go, then their gazes swiveled back to me. A wave of derisive laughter, hushed and ugly, followed in their wake. "Still clinging to him, it seems." "Such a shame. She really thought she had a chance." "Pathetic."

I stood there, listening to the cruel words, feeling the invisible hands of judgment pushing me down. My lips curled into a faint, almost imperceptible smile. They didn't see the fire in my eyes. They didn't hear the new promise forming in my heart. They didn't know the old Cleo was truly gone. She wouldn' t be clinging to anyone. Not anymore. I would burn this empire to the ground if I had to. And they would all watch.

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