My life with Julian was a decade-long fairytale, a testament to building an empire from nothing. He was the charismatic face, I was the quiet strategist; together, we were Thorne Industries, a force to be reckoned with. Then, a call from a school nurse shattered it all. "Is this Mrs. Thorne?" she asked, her voice rushed. I corrected her, a polite smile on my face. "It's Ms. Vance, actually. Is everything okay with Ethan?" "Ethan? No, ma'am. This is about your son, Leo Thorne." Leo Thorne. A name I didn't recognize, a son I didn't have. My world tilted. The nurse was calling for Julian's legal wife, Chloe-a woman I knew as his executive assistant, a woman whose eyes always lingered on him a little too long. Chloe, his wife, and mother to his son, Leo. The word "wife" echoed in my silent office, a brutal, horrifying truth. Every late night he supposedly worked, every solo business trip, twisted into a grotesque betrayal. Before I could even process this seismic shift, a sharp cramp seized me, followed by another. Blood. Our baby. Julian's betrayal was killing our child. When I woke up, the baby was gone. Julian, playing the grieving husband, told me it was my fault, "the stress." He acted the part, even as he tried to frame my miscarriage for his mistress and their son, a son he' d had for years, a whole life hidden from me. Then, Liam Sterling, my competitor and old college friend, sent an envelope. Inside were photos: Julian, Chloe, and two children, Leo and a girl I didn't know, a picture of a perfect family. And a text from Chloe: "Heard about the baby. Too bad. Some wombs just aren't meant to hold on." My fury, cold and clear, solidified into a single, diamond-hard resolve. They would pay. Julian, the monster, and Chloe, who had just admitted something far worse: she was the drunk driver who killed my mother four years ago, and Julian had covered it up. He thought I was weak. He thought I wouldn't fight. He was wrong. My voice recorder, hidden beneath my pillow, captured his monstrous plan: "Once Elara's baby is born, we'll tell her it died. Then we'll register the baby as ours." He was going to steal my child. The rage was a firestorm. I called Liam Sterling. "I want to destroy Julian Thorne. I want him to lose everything. And I want her in jail for the rest of her life." The game was on.
My life with Julian was a decade-long fairytale, a testament to building an empire from nothing.
He was the charismatic face, I was the quiet strategist; together, we were Thorne Industries, a force to be reckoned with.
Then, a call from a school nurse shattered it all.
"Is this Mrs. Thorne?" she asked, her voice rushed.
I corrected her, a polite smile on my face. "It's Ms. Vance, actually. Is everything okay with Ethan?"
"Ethan? No, ma'am. This is about your son, Leo Thorne."
Leo Thorne. A name I didn't recognize, a son I didn't have.
My world tilted.
The nurse was calling for Julian's legal wife, Chloe-a woman I knew as his executive assistant, a woman whose eyes always lingered on him a little too long.
Chloe, his wife, and mother to his son, Leo.
The word "wife" echoed in my silent office, a brutal, horrifying truth.
Every late night he supposedly worked, every solo business trip, twisted into a grotesque betrayal.
Before I could even process this seismic shift, a sharp cramp seized me, followed by another.
Blood. Our baby. Julian's betrayal was killing our child.
When I woke up, the baby was gone. Julian, playing the grieving husband, told me it was my fault, "the stress."
He acted the part, even as he tried to frame my miscarriage for his mistress and their son, a son he' d had for years, a whole life hidden from me.
Then, Liam Sterling, my competitor and old college friend, sent an envelope. Inside were photos: Julian, Chloe, and two children, Leo and a girl I didn't know, a picture of a perfect family.
And a text from Chloe: "Heard about the baby. Too bad. Some wombs just aren't meant to hold on."
My fury, cold and clear, solidified into a single, diamond-hard resolve.
They would pay. Julian, the monster, and Chloe, who had just admitted something far worse: she was the drunk driver who killed my mother four years ago, and Julian had covered it up.
He thought I was weak. He thought I wouldn't fight.
He was wrong.
My voice recorder, hidden beneath my pillow, captured his monstrous plan:
"Once Elara's baby is born, we'll tell her it died. Then we'll register the baby as ours."
He was going to steal my child.
The rage was a firestorm.
I called Liam Sterling. "I want to destroy Julian Thorne. I want him to lose everything. And I want her in jail for the rest of her life."
The game was on.
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