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Carlee signed the divorce papers without a second of hesitation, ending a three-year marriage to a billionaire husband she had never even met. She walked away with nothing, publicly cutting ties with both the Vaughan empire and her toxic family to launch her own jewelry design studio. Her family immediately retaliated. They mocked her as a useless, abandoned trophy wife and ruthlessly blacklisted her new company from every major supplier in the city, intent on forcing her to crawl back. Exhausted but defiant, she hired a handsome, seemingly broke valet she bumped into outside a hotel to be her personal assistant. She even bought him a tailored suit, pitying his maxed-out credit cards and his desperate need for a paycheck. But things quickly stopped making sense. Why did this humble assistant possess such lethal combat skills, effortlessly snapping a two-hundred-pound bodyguard's wrist to protect her? And why did top-tier luxury store managers bow to him in absolute, trembling terror? "Whatever is happening, I will handle it." Carlee found a foolish comfort in her poor assistant's reassuring voice. She had absolutely no idea that the man sitting at the wobbly desk in her cramped office was Braden Vaughan-her legally divorced ex-husband. And the ruthless billionaire was currently orchestrating a global financial massacre from the shadows, entirely obsessed with clearing her path to the top.
The heavy oak door of the midtown Manhattan law firm groaned as Carlee Barron pushed it open.
The faint sound shattered the dead silence of the conference room. Alistair Finch, the proxy attorney for a husband she had never met, looked up from his paperwork. He adjusted his gold-rimmed glasses, a calculated move meant to project authority.
Carlee did not break her stride. She walked straight to the long mahogany table and pulled out a leather chair, the legs scraping harshly against the floor. She sat down.
Alistair slid a thick stack of divorce papers across the polished wood.
"I must remind you, Mrs. Vaughan," Alistair said, his tone dripping with condescension. "By signing this, you forfeit all claims to alimony. You walk away with nothing."
Carlee did not even glance at the asset division clauses. She flipped directly to the last page, her eyes scanning for the signature line.
Alistair reached out, his hand pressing flat against the document. "Do not let your emotions dictate your future. This is a mistake."
Carlee let out a short, cold laugh. She swatted his hand away.
She pulled a Montblanc pen from her purse. The metal felt heavy and cold against her fingers. She paused for a single second, the tip of her pen hovering over the blank space designated for the male party. A flicker of mockery crossed her eyes.
She had never bothered to learn the full name of the man the world simply called Mr. Vaughan.
Without another moment of hesitation, she pressed the nib to the paper and signed her own name in sharp, aggressive strokes on the female party's line.
Carlee tossed the pen onto the table. The sharp clatter echoed in the room, finalizing the death of a ridiculous three-year marriage.
Alistair gathered the papers, his jaw tight. "You will regret leaving the protection of the Vaughan family."
Carlee stood up. She smoothed the front of her tailored trench coat.
"Tell your boss he can keep his money and his hiding out," Carlee said, her voice flat. "I'm taking my life back."
She turned on her heel and walked out of the conference room, her stilettos clicking sharply against the marble floor, never looking back.
Carlee pushed through the revolving doors of the building and stepped onto the sidewalk. The crisp autumn wind whipped her long hair across her face. She took a deep breath. The air burned her lungs, but it tasted like freedom.
She stepped toward the curb, raising her hand to hail a yellow cab.
Tires screeched. A black Maybach swerved into the lane right in front of her. A wave of dirty street water splashed up, soaking the hem of her beige trench coat.
Carlee looked down at the dark, muddy stains ruining the expensive fabric. Heat rushed to her face. Her stomach tightened with sudden, violent anger.
She pulled out her phone and opened a ride-share app, her thumbs hitting the screen with unnecessary force.
A notification popped up. The driver had canceled due to rush hour traffic.
Carlee bit down on her lower lip hard enough to taste copper. She stared at the canceled screen, her chest rising and falling in quick, shallow breaths.
She had a critical gala to attend tonight. She could not miss it.
She shoved the phone back into her purse and started walking. The Four Seasons was only three blocks away.
Fifteen minutes later, Carlee arrived at the main entrance of the Four Seasons. The brilliant lights of the awning stung her eyes, making her squint.
She walked toward the valet stand, desperate to find a bellhop who could help her clean the mud off her coat.
Her eyes caught on a tall figure standing with his back to her.
The man wore a perfectly tailored black suit. He was leaning over slightly, pulling a set of keys from the ignition of a silver Aston Martin. His movements were slow, fluid, and carelessly elegant.
Carlee stepped up behind him. She reached out and tapped his broad shoulder.
"Excuse me," she said, expecting him to turn around and offer a towel.
The man turned.
Carlee's breath hitched in her throat. Her lungs simply stopped working.
She was paralyzed by the aggressively handsome face staring down at her. His jawline was sharp enough to cut glass, and his eyes were a deep, fathomless dark brown that seemed to swallow the light around them.
Braden Vaughan, currently inspecting his own hotel incognito, raised a single, dark eyebrow. He looked at the woman who had just touched him.
Carlee forced her lungs to take in air. Her eyes dropped to his suit. He wasn't wearing a tie. The dark, immaculate fabric of his jacket blended seamlessly with the shadows of the evening. He was standing directly beside the valet podium, his posture relaxed yet commanding, with a set of luxury car keys dangling effortlessly from his long, powerful fingers. Clipped to his belt loop was a generic VIP guest pass that, in the dim, chaotic lighting of the driveway, closely resembled a standard employee badge. Her brain, heavily clouded by the overwhelming stress of the evening and the sharp sting of the freezing wind, bypassed all rational observation. She immediately categorized him as a high-end valet.
She reached into her purse, pulled out a crisp hundred-dollar bill, and shoved it toward his chest.
"Take me to a VIP lounge and get this mud off my coat," she ordered, her voice tight.
Braden looked down at the money hovering inches from his chest. A flash of pure shock crossed his features, quickly replaced by a dark, heavy amusement.
A few yards away, the actual lobby manager took a panicked step forward, opening his mouth to intervene.
Braden caught the manager's eye over Carlee's head. He didn't raise a hand. He didn't even shift his weight. Instead, from the deep shadows near the revolving doors, Denzel-Braden's executive assistant-stepped forward with silent precision and flashed a discreet, high-level security badge. The manager's eyes widened in sudden realization that this was a private VIP matter being handled internally. Swallowing his panic, the manager immediately froze, lowered his head, and backed away into the safety of the lobby.
Braden reached out and took the hundred-dollar bill. As he pulled it from her grip, the rough pads of his fingers brushed against the sensitive skin of her palm.
A tiny shiver shot up Carlee's arm.
Braden bowed his head just a fraction. He extended his arm toward the side entrance.
"Right this way," he said. His voice was a low, gravelly rumble that vibrated in Carlee's chest.
Carlee followed him. Her eyes involuntarily tracked the width of his shoulders and the long, powerful stride of his legs. A strange, heavy heat started to pool low in her stomach.
They walked into a secluded VIP corridor. The hallway was empty. The dim wall sconces cast long, intimate shadows across the carpet. The air between them suddenly felt thick and hard to breathe.
Braden stopped walking. He turned around slowly.
He looked down at her, his dark eyes locking onto hers. The sheer force of his masculine presence seemed to suck the oxygen from the narrow space.
"So," Braden murmured, his voice dropping an octave. "What other extra services do you require?"
The Jilted Ex-Wife's Undercover Billionaire Assistant
Duwu Qingyang
Billionaires
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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