I skipped my final lab review in Geneva and endured a fourteen-hour flight to surprise my husband for our fourth wedding anniversary. Instead, looking through the window of our beachfront estate, I saw him playing the perfect, loving father to a "tragic widow's" daughter, kissing the widow with practiced, casual intimacy. Fleeing in pure panic, I got into a horrific car crash. Waking up in the VIP hospital room, I kept my eyes shut and heard my husband talking to his best friend right beside my bed. "She's just a party girl who knows how to swipe a black card. I only play the part because I need her father's proxy vote for the IPO." "Every time I have to touch her in bed, it feels like a corporate obligation. It makes me sick." Later, even my own father demanded I step down from my company role and publicly welcome the mistress, just to protect the family's investment in the upcoming ten-billion-dollar IPO. Four years of marriage and quiet humiliations, all reduced to a calculated lie. They all thought I was just a brainless, hysterical socialite who could be easily manipulated and discarded. They didn't know that the core anti-aging algorithm his entire empire relied on was secretly built by me. I calmly pulled out my phone and texted my divorce lawyer. "I want him bankrupt. On the day his company rings the bell, I am going to burn his entire life to the ground."
The black Maybach rolled through the Hamptons darkness, the tires crushing gravel with a heavy, expensive sound.
Bridget leaned her head against the cool leather seat. She pressed two fingers to her temples, rubbing in slow, hard circles to fight the jet lag. A fourteen-hour flight from Geneva was brutal, but the calendar on her phone read their fourth wedding anniversary.
"Ma'am, should I call Mr. Cline to let him know we are approaching?" the driver asked, his eyes meeting hers in the rearview mirror.
"No." Bridget dropped her hand. "I want to surprise him."
Jayson had told her he was stuck in a critical M&A meeting in Boston tonight. But Bridget knew how much he hated being alone on their anniversary. She had skipped her final lab review just to be here.
The car glided to a halt near the hidden driveway of their private beachfront estate. The ocean waves crashed against the shore, a rhythmic, isolating sound.
Bridget stepped out into the salty night air. She gripped the handle of her limited-edition Himalayan Birkin bag. Her stiletto heels clicked softly against the familiar cobblestone path leading to the back terrace.
She stopped.
Warm, yellow light spilled onto the manicured lawn from the first-floor floor-to-ceiling windows.
Bridget frowned. Jayson was supposed to be in Boston. The security system hadn't alerted her to any guests.
She slowed her pace. She stepped off the stones and onto the damp grass, silencing her footsteps. She crept toward the partially drawn blinds, her chest tightening with a sudden, inexplicable dread.
She pressed her shoulder against the cold glass and looked through the narrow gap.
A massive strawberry cake sat in the center of the mahogany dining table.
Jayson stood in the middle of the room. He wore a casual cashmere sweater. He was holding a little girl, no older than five, in the crook of his arm. Pippa.
Pippa giggled, a high, piercing sound that bled through the glass. She reached out with a sticky finger and smeared white frosting directly onto the bridge of Jayson's nose.
Jayson didn't flinch. He didn't scowl the way he did when someone spilled coffee in the boardroom. His eyes crinkled. He looked at the child with a raw, unfiltered adoration Bridget had never seen directed at her.
A woman walked out of the open kitchen.
Golda.
She wore a plain silk slip dress. She carried a glass of fresh juice. She walked right up to Jayson, her movements fluid and entirely too comfortable. She took a napkin and gently wiped the frosting off his nose.
Jayson lowered his head. His lips brushed against Golda's forehead. The kiss was lingering. It was practiced. It was the casual intimacy of a man kissing his wife in their own home.
Bridget's lungs stopped working.
The oxygen in her blood turned to lead. A violent spasm ripped through her stomach.
Her fingers went numb.
The Himalayan Birkin slipped from her grasp. It hit the wooden deck with a heavy, hollow thud.
Inside the house, the laughter died instantly.
Jayson's head snapped toward the window. His eyes narrowed into the darkness. He set Pippa down on the floor with rushed, tense movements and started walking toward the front hallway.
Bridget's brain flatlined. Pure, animal panic hijacked her nervous system.
She spun around and ran.
Her heel caught in the gap between two paving stones. She yanked her foot upward, tearing the leather strap, and kept running, stumbling blindly toward the distant driveway.
The heavy oak front door swung open behind her.
"Who's there?" Jayson's voice cut through the sound of the ocean.
Bridget threw herself behind the rusted chassis of an abandoned landscaping RV parked near the tree line. She clamped both hands over her mouth, biting down on her own knuckles to trap the sob tearing up her throat.
She peered around the edge of the metal.
Jayson stood on the porch, sweeping a heavy flashlight across the lawn. The beam missed her by inches. Golda stepped out behind him, her hand clutching the back of his sweater.
Jayson reached back. He patted Golda's hand, his thumb stroking her knuckles in a gesture of absolute reassurance. They exchanged a look, tight and protective, before stepping back inside and locking the door.
Bridget slid down the side of the RV. The cold metal bit into her spine.
Tears spilled over her eyelashes, hot and fast, burning her cold cheeks. Four years. Four years of marriage. Four years of believing the lie about Golda-the tragic widow who was supposedly Jayson's savior.
She pushed herself off the ground. She dragged her broken heel across the gravel until she reached the Maybach. She yanked the door open and collapsed into the backseat.
"Drive," Bridget choked out, her entire body shaking violently. "Manhattan. Now."
The Maybach tore down the coastal highway. Bridget wrapped her arms around her ribs, trying to hold her shattering chest together. Her teeth chattered.
Headlights flared in the windshield.
A heavy commercial truck swerved across the double yellow line. The high beams flooded the cabin, blinding her.
The driver screamed. He jerked the steering wheel hard to the right.
The tires shrieked against the asphalt. The smell of burning rubber flooded the air.
The Maybach slammed into the metal guardrail. The impact launched Bridget sideways. Her skull cracked against the reinforced window glass.
The world went black.
The Betrayed Heiress And Her Genius Comeback
I. HAWKINS
Romance
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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