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He married her as a contract, a duty, a cold transaction that lasted three years. She loved him so much that she sold herself to him-just to save her mother's life. He called her a "commodity," said she was "tainted," pinned her down in the back of his car while whispering another woman's name-Britt. Then she finally gave up. She placed the divorce papers in front of him and said quietly, "Francisco, let's end this." For the first time, he panicked. The man who never really looked at her began spending entire nights outside her hospital room, his hands trembling as he reached for her-then pulled back. He searched for her like a madman, begging with bloodshot eyes: "Evelyn... just give me one more chance..." But she gently removed his hand, her voice softer than the wind: "Francisco, you lost my heart a long time ago."
The ultrasound picture slid across the smooth marble tabletop, stopping just short of her coffee cup. A grainy, black-and-white image. Evelyn's eyes traced the name typed neatly at the top: Morgan, Francisco.
"I call him Frankie, you know," Britt Maddox said, her voice as smooth and sweet as the cream she stirred into her latte. She rested a perfectly manicured hand on her flat stomach. "I'm three months along, Evelyn."
The air in Evelyn's lungs turned to glass. She could feel the delicate porcelain of her coffee cup threatening to crack under the pressure of her grip. Her fingers were white. For three years, she had been Mrs. Morgan in secret, a title that felt more like a job description than an identity. Now, even that felt like a lie.
She forced herself to meet Britt's gaze, a carefully constructed mask of indifference sliding into place. "So?"
The single word was a monumental effort. Inside, a fault line had just ripped through the foundation of her world. The tiny, fragile hope she'd nurtured for this anniversary dinner-a hope that maybe, after three years, something real could begin-shattered into dust. A sharp, physical pain seized the muscle of her heart, making it hard to draw a full breath.
She reached for her cup, but her hand trembled. A slight, almost imperceptible tremor that betrayed everything. She quickly used her other hand to steady it, the simple act draining her of all remaining strength.
Britt's smile widened. She had seen it. "So, don't you think you should step aside? For the sake of our family."
The words were polite, but the meaning was a blade. "You've been married to him for three years. Has he ever even touched you, really? Or is it just... a duty?" Britt leaned forward, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "Don't fool yourself, Evelyn. Your marriage is just a piece of paper."
Evelyn's stomach clenched. Britt knew about the contract. She knew the intimate, humiliating details of their arrangement. That could only mean one thing: Francisco had told her. He had shared the secrets of their marriage with this woman, laying Evelyn's shame bare for her to inspect.
Britt reached into her Hermès bag and pulled out a checkbook. She wrote with a flourish and slid a slip of paper across the table, next to the ultrasound. "Here's five million dollars. Enough for you and your mother to live comfortably for the rest of your lives. Take the money, and disappear."
She capped her pen with a decisive click. "File the divorce papers tomorrow. It's better for everyone."
A sound escaped Evelyn's throat, something between a gasp and a laugh. It was a raw, ugly sound that didn't belong in the quiet elegance of the café. "Five million?" she asked, her voice shaking with a strange, hysterical amusement. "Are you trying to tip me, Britt?"
The image of a different check flashed in her mind. The one for one million dollars that Francisco left on the nightstand after each of their cold, scheduled encounters. The irony was so bitter it burned her throat. Five million to end it all. In Francisco's world, maybe that was her market price.
She set her coffee cup down with a firm click. Leaning forward, her voice dropped, low and steady. "As long as I don't sign anything, I am the only legally recognized Mrs. Morgan."
She let her eyes travel over Britt, from her designer dress to her smug smile. "And you," she said, each word precise, "are, at best, a mistress. A homewrecker who can't be seen in public."
Britt's smile faltered, the first crack in her perfect facade.
"And don't forget," Evelyn continued, the words tasting like victory and ash, "a bastard child can't inherit a single cent from the Morgan family trust funds. It's all in the bylaws."
The air between them crackled, thick with unspoken violence.
Britt shot to her feet, her chair scraping harshly against the floor. Her voice was shrill, losing its carefully modulated softness. "Do you really think he'll let you keep that title? You're so naive!" she hissed. "He loves me! It has always been me!"
Evelyn didn't look at her again. She picked up her purse, her movements deliberate and slow. She walked towards the door, her back straight, each step an act of will.
The moment she stepped outside, the cold November wind hit her like a physical blow. The rigid control she had maintained inside the café shattered. Tears, hot and furious, streamed down her face, blurring the glittering lights of Manhattan.
She fumbled for her car keys, her hands shaking uncontrollably. Once inside, she collapsed against the steering wheel, the dam of three years of repressed misery finally breaking. A ragged, silent scream tore from her throat. It was the sound of a caged animal, wounded and utterly alone.
Francisco Morgan, you bastard, she cursed him in her mind, over and over again.
She started the car and drove, with no destination in mind, weaving through the city streets as if she could outrun the suffocating pain in her chest. Eventually, she found herself parked by the Hudson River, the dark water a mirror for the emptiness inside her. She let herself cry until her eyes were swollen and dry, until there were no tears left.
Hours later, she looked at her reflection in the rearview mirror. The woman staring back was a wreck. Carefully, methodically, she repaired her makeup, wiping away the tear tracks, reapplying her lipstick. She forced the calm, composed mask of Evelyn Guthrie back into place.
She drove back to the Upper East Side, to the cold, sprawling mansion they called home. The house was dark and silent. She sat down in the cavernous living room, the ticking of the grandfather clock the only sound. She watched the hands move, waiting for the man who was supposed to be celebrating their anniversary with her, the man who was never coming home. The hope she'd felt just hours ago was gone, replaced by a vast, silent graveyard of feeling.
Too Late For Regret, Mr. Morgan
Bu Chuang
Billionaires
Chapter 1
26/05/2026
Chapter 2
26/05/2026
Chapter 3
26/05/2026
Chapter 4
26/05/2026
Chapter 5
26/05/2026
Chapter 6
26/05/2026
Chapter 7
26/05/2026
Chapter 8
26/05/2026
Chapter 9
26/05/2026
Chapter 10
26/05/2026