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I was engaged to Atticus George, the youngest king of Wall Street. For ten years, his family raised me, and everyone in Manhattan envied my upcoming fairytale wedding. But just days before we were supposed to register at City Hall, I overheard him talking to his best friend. "She's a sunk cost. It's a long-term investment that yields no real excitement, but the cost of replacing the partner at this stage is too high." To him, our marriage was just a cold business transaction to unlock his family trust. Things got worse when I was falsely accused of assault and taken to the police precinct. Atticus showed up, but not to bail me out. He was there to protect the accuser's sister, Celena-the pregnant widow of his late best friend. When paparazzi suddenly swarmed the lobby, Atticus panicked. To shield Celena from the flashing cameras, he violently shoved me out of the way. I crashed hard into an iron bench, tearing my arm open. Bleeding and gasping for air, I watched him carry a fainting Celena to his car, completely ignoring my existence. At the hospital, he even signed her emergency admission forms as her "family." For ten years, I had poured my entire heart into loving him. I didn't understand how the boy who once promised to protect me could give all his desperate tenderness to another woman while leaving me bleeding on the floor. When he abandoned me yet again in the middle of the night just because she called crying, my heart finally died. I packed my bags and left a single note on his desk. "The contract is terminated." Then, I walked out of his estate and into the freezing rain.
The charity gala at the Manhattan penthouse club was suffocating.
Charlotte stood near the towering champagne pyramid, the noise of clinking crystal and polite laughter pressing against her eardrums.
She gripped the black velvet clutch in her hands. Her knuckles were stark white. Inside the small bag sat the folded draft of their prenuptial agreement, delivered by the George family lawyers just that afternoon.
She took a slow, deep breath, trying to push past the tightness in her chest. Her eyes scanned the crowded ballroom, searching for the broad shoulders of her fiancé, Atticus George.
A group of Manhattan socialites drifted toward her. Their designer gowns rustled against the marble floor.
"Charlotte, darling! Congratulations. You must be thrilled," one of them said, her eyes dropping to the massive diamond on Charlotte's left hand. "Marrying the youngest king of Wall Street. We are all green with envy."
Charlotte forced the corners of her mouth up. "Thank you. We're very happy."
The lie tasted like ash on her tongue.
A waiter walked past with a silver tray. She reached out and grabbed a glass of sparkling water, drinking it quickly to soothe her dry throat.
Out of the corner of her eye, she caught a glimpse of two familiar figures disappearing down the dimly lit hallway that led to the private cigar lounge.
She set the glass down. Excusing herself to the socialites with a murmur about needing to powder her nose, she slipped away from the crowd.
The hallway was lined with heavy Persian carpets. The thick wool completely absorbed the sharp clicks of her stilettos.
As she neared the heavy mahogany door, the scent of expensive Cuban tobacco mixed with Tom Ford cologne drifted into the corridor. The door was cracked open just an inch.
She stopped. Through the narrow gap, she saw Atticus. He was standing with his back to the door, a glass of amber liquid in his hand. His best friend, Sterling Pierce, sat on a leather sofa opposite him.
Sterling swirled the whiskey in his glass. A smirk played on his lips. "So, City Hall next week. You're really doing it? Tying yourself down to the good little ward?"
Charlotte's breath hitched. She pressed her hand flat against the cool wall, waiting for Atticus to defend her. To say something-anything-that sounded like love.
Atticus exhaled a thick cloud of gray smoke. His voice, when he spoke, was flat. Completely devoid of any warmth.
"It's a sunk cost, Sterling."
The words hit Charlotte's chest like a physical blow.
"Ten years," Atticus continued, his tone as casual as if he were discussing a stock portfolio. "The trust requires a marriage to unlock the final tier of the family shares. She knows the drill. It's a long-term investment that yields no real excitement, but the cost of replacing the partner at this stage is too high. I simply don't have the patience to train someone new."
Charlotte's stomach violently dropped.
A wave of severe nausea washed over her. Her fingernails dug so hard into the leather of her clutch that the sharp pain radiated up her wrist.
Sterling chuckled. "A sunk cost. God, you are a cold bastard. You don't feel trapped by that piece of paper?"
Atticus let out a low, mocking laugh. "It's a contract. Nothing more. She gets the George name, I get the board off my back. It's business."
Every single corporate term sliced through Charlotte's skin like a razor blade.
She took a step back, her vision blurring with unshed tears. Her heel caught the edge of a heavy brass decorative planter sitting against the wall.
Clang.
The dull, metallic thud echoed loudly in the quiet hallway.
The conversation inside the cigar room stopped instantly.
Atticus's head snapped toward the door. Through the crack, his sharp, predatory gaze locked onto the empty space in the hallway.
Panic seized Charlotte's throat. She spun around, hiking up the heavy silk skirt of her gown, and practically ran down the corridor.
She pushed through the door of the women's restroom and locked herself inside the furthest stall.
She leaned her back against the cold tile, gasping for air as if she had been held underwater. Her heart hammered against her ribs in a frantic, painful rhythm.
Slowly, she walked out of the stall and stood in front of the large vanity mirror. Her face was chalky white. The flawless makeup she had spent two hours perfecting now looked like a clown's mask.
Her hands shook uncontrollably as she opened the velvet clutch. She pulled out the thick stack of paper.
Prenuptial Agreement.
The edges of the paper crumpled under her tight grip. Her eyes burned fiercely, but she refused to let the tears fall.
"Charlotte."
The deep, commanding voice came from right outside the restroom door.
Her breath froze in her lungs.
She shoved the papers back into her bag and snapped it shut. She closed her eyes, forced her facial muscles to relax, and pushed the restroom door open.
Atticus stood there in his tailored tuxedo, his dark eyes entirely unreadable, staring down at her with a chilling lack of emotion.
The Sunk Cost: Leaving My Billionaire Fiancé
Gu Mumu
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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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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