On the fifth anniversary of my father' s death, I discovered my fiancé, Graham, was having an affair with my sister, Hollie. The betrayal was compounded by a second, more devastating secret: Hollie was pregnant with his child. All this, while I was secretly carrying his baby too. He swore his loyalty to me, calling betrayal the ultimate sin, all while planning a future with her. He dismissed her as a "childish infatuation" to my face, then rushed to her side for a "family emergency." I followed him and watched them embrace, heard him promise her fireworks and my life. I saw her hand him a gift, then he carried her inside. The door closed on their shared secret, and on my entire world. My sister then sent me a picture of her ultrasound, taunting me to leave quietly. She thought she had won. But she didn't know I had already made a call. Three days later, as Graham stood with a visibly pregnant Hollie at the chapel where we were supposed to get married, he saw my car speed past. His face twisted in horror as he realized I was gone. Not just leaving, but disappearing completely. Three years later, I returned, no longer his fiancée, but Dr. Cross, a powerful strategist he couldn't touch. And he was just a man desperate to get back what he had destroyed.
On the fifth anniversary of my father' s death, I discovered my fiancé, Graham, was having an affair with my sister, Hollie.
The betrayal was compounded by a second, more devastating secret: Hollie was pregnant with his child. All this, while I was secretly carrying his baby too.
He swore his loyalty to me, calling betrayal the ultimate sin, all while planning a future with her. He dismissed her as a "childish infatuation" to my face, then rushed to her side for a "family emergency."
I followed him and watched them embrace, heard him promise her fireworks and my life. I saw her hand him a gift, then he carried her inside. The door closed on their shared secret, and on my entire world.
My sister then sent me a picture of her ultrasound, taunting me to leave quietly. She thought she had won.
But she didn't know I had already made a call. Three days later, as Graham stood with a visibly pregnant Hollie at the chapel where we were supposed to get married, he saw my car speed past.
His face twisted in horror as he realized I was gone. Not just leaving, but disappearing completely. Three years later, I returned, no longer his fiancée, but Dr. Cross, a powerful strategist he couldn't touch. And he was just a man desperate to get back what he had destroyed.
Chapter 1
Corinna POV:
His hand on my waist felt like a betrayal before I even heard the words. It was the fifth anniversary of my father' s death, and Graham Rios, the man I was supposed to marry, the man I just learned I was carrying a child for, was discussing his affair with my sister, Hollie. Right here. Right now. In the hushed elegance of our family' s private dining room, as if my world wasn't already fragile enough.
My fingers instinctively brushed against the pocket of my dress. The small plastic stick, tucked away, suddenly felt like a weapon, or a ticking bomb. Two pink lines. A secret I' d planned to whisper to Graham tonight, a fragile hope in the shadow of my grief. Now, it was just another layer of ice coating my heart.
I had imagined the perfect moment. After the memorial dinner, an intimate quiet, perhaps by the fireplace, telling him we were about to start our own family. A new beginning, a light in the perpetual dimness since Dad left.
"She's becoming quite a distraction, isn't she, sir?" Robert, Graham's most trusted aide, murmured, his voice too loud in the sudden lull of conversation. He wore a sneer that didn't quite reach his eyes, a look I knew all too well from years in politics. It was the look of a man who held a secret, and enjoyed it.
My breath hitched. "She"?
Graham chuckled, a low, dismissive sound that grated against my nerves. "Hollie? Just a childish infatuation. Nothing serious. You know how these young ones are, always craving attention. Easily managed."
His words hit me like a physical blow. Easily managed. He was talking about my sister. My younger sister, Hollie. The one who had always lived in my shadow, always sought Graham' s approval, his attention.
He turned to me then, his arm tightening around my waist. His smile was flawless, practiced. But his eyes, they darted across the room, never quite settling on mine. It was a familiar trick. A politician's trick. Engage the body, disengage the soul. I used to think it was just his ambition, his focus. Now I knew better. It was just him.
"Corinna, my love, are you alright?" he asked, his voice dripping with honeyed concern. "You look a little pale."
I felt my blood run cold, turning to sludge in my veins. The warmth of his hand, once comforting, now felt like a brand, searing my skin. My mind, trained by years at my father's side, was already dissecting his words, Robert' s smirk, the subtle shift in Hollie's posture across the table. It was a political machine, and I was seeing its gears turn, grinding me into dust.
My father had taught me to listen, not just to words, but to the silences between them. He taught me to read every gesture, every flicker of an eye. He taught me to always be three steps ahead. And right now, all my training screamed one thing: run.
I looked at Graham, his perfect face, his charismatic smile. The man I loved. The man I thought loved me. He was an open book, but I had been too blind, too trusting, to read it. He was a lie, beautifully packaged.
A tremor ran through my hand, the one resting on his arm. I quickly clasped it with the other, forcing a smile that felt brittle, like thin ice about to crack. "Just a little tired, darling," I lied, the words tasting like ash. "It's been a long day."
My decision was made in that instant. It wasn' t a scream. It wasn' t a confrontation. It was a cold, quiet resolution. I would disappear. Not just from this dinner, but from his life. And I wouldn't just leave. I would dismantle him, piece by piece, from the shadows. Three days. That' s all I needed. Three days to become invisible.
"Of course, my love," Graham said, his smile softening, believing my lie. He leaned in, pressing a soft kiss to my temple. It felt hollow, a performance for the benefit of the room. I could almost hear him mentally checking a box. Wife handled. Crisis averted.
"I overheard you earlier," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "Was there something urgent with the family business? You looked quite stressed." I watched him, searching for any flicker of discomfort.
He pulled back, a slight frown creasing his brow. "Oh, that. Just some minor internal disagreements. Nothing for you to worry your pretty head about. You know how families are. Always some drama." He waved a dismissive hand, as if brushing away a fly.
He didn' t even remember what he' d said to Robert, which hollow lie he was supposed to stick to. His arrogance was a shield, protecting him from the inconvenience of truth, from the need to even bother convincing me. I was just Corinna, loyal and predictable. I was just someone to be managed.
The air in the room suddenly felt too thick, too heavy. It was suffocating me. I needed to get out. "If you don't mind, Graham, I think I'll slip away for a moment. Get some fresh air."
"Go, my dear," he murmured, already turning his attention back to a Senator across the room. He barely noticed me leave, already lost in the political dance.
As I walked away, I felt the familiar gazes of admiration, the whispers of "the perfect couple," "the future First Lady." They saw the carefully constructed facade, the powerful man and his elegant fiancée. They didn' t see the gaping wound in my chest, the blood draining from my soul. They saw a woman on top of the world. I saw a fool.
I had believed in him, in us. I had poured my entire being into his career, his dreams. I had sacrificed my own ambitions, my own identity, to become "Mrs. Graham Rios." I thought it was love. It was just a job, and I was being outsourced without notice.
My mind raced, replaying the overheard words. "She' s becoming quite a distraction..." "Just a childish infatuation..." "Easily managed." And then, Hollie's voice, barely a whisper, laced with a triumphant edge: "But... what about the baby, Graham? It' s yours." The silence that followed had been deafening. Hollie, pregnant with Graham's child. My sister. My fiancé. The family I had left.
My phone vibrated in my hand, a discreet, familiar tone. It was a coded message, an old contact. Carroll Sparks. My father' s former campaign manager, a man who saw my potential even when I ignored it. He was offering me a position. A high-stakes, off-the-books campaign. He had always tried to pull me back into the game, to remind me of my own power.
I stepped out onto the secluded balcony, the cool night air a welcome shock to my burning skin. I immediately dialed Carroll. "It's Corinna," I said, my voice tight. "I'm in."
"Corinna? I thought you were busy preparing for your wedding," Carroll's voice came through, laced with surprise. "Last I heard, you were still playing loyal fiancée."
"That chapter is closed," I stated, the words firm, decisive. "I'm ready to work. Anything. Anywhere. As long as it's far away from here."
"I knew you had it in you," he said, a hint of admiration creeping into his tone. "You always were more your father's daughter than you let on. Too brilliant to waste your talents polishing someone else's brass."
He paused, then added, "You know, this position requires you to vanish. Completely. No contact with your old life. Are you sure you're ready for that? To leave everything behind? Family, friends..."
The word "family" stung, an open wound. I flinched, a sharp, involuntary jerk. Family. My parents were gone. My sister was a viper. My fiancé, a predator. What family? A bitter laugh escaped my lips, a harsh, ragged sound. "There is no family, Carroll. Not anymore."
My eyes burned, a familiar prickle behind my eyelids. I blinked hard, forcing the tears back. This was not the time for weakness. I had buried my parents, and now I was burying another part of myself. The grieving was over. The strategy began.
"I need the highest level of security clearance," I told Carroll, my voice now devoid of any emotion. Cold, hard, resolute. "Everything. Erase me. My digital footprint. My financial records. My very existence. I need to be a ghost."
A long silence on the other end. "Corinna, do you understand what you're asking? Graham Rios has powerful connections. If you just disappear, he'll tear this city apart looking for you."
I let out another dry, humorless laugh. "Let him search. He won't find me. He underestimated me once. He won't get that chance again." My voice dropped, a dangerous edge creeping into it. "He betrayed me, Carroll. And not just me. He betrayed the trust I placed in him, the future I imagined. He took everything."
The admission, stark and raw, hung in the air. The words hurt more than I expected, a sharp pang in my chest. All those years, building him up, pushing him forward, standing by his side. It was all for nothing. Less than nothing. It was for his affair with my sister. My pain was a fuel now.
"So that's why the sudden change of heart," Carroll murmured, a note of understanding in his voice. "I always knew he wasn't good enough for you, Corinna. You deserve better."
"I don't deserve anything," I stated flatly. "I just want to work. To build something of my own. Something he can't touch. Something he can't corrupt."
"Consider it done," Carroll said, his voice firm. "The details will be sent to a burner phone I' ll have delivered tonight. Don't worry about anything else. Just pack a bag. The car will pick you up before dawn, three days from now."
A wave of relief, cold and unfamiliar, washed over me. It wasn't happiness, not even close. It was the quiet calm of a path chosen, a decision made. The first step towards reclaiming myself.
"Thank you, Carroll," I whispered. "For everything."
He simply hummed in response, then the line went dead. I stood on the balcony, looking out at the city lights, a glittering tapestry woven with ambition, power, and deceit. Graham' s city. But not for long. Soon, it would just be another battleground. And I, Corinna Cross, would be ready.
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