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After a seven-year relationship, my fiancé Bennett abandoned me on our marriage license day for a "marriage of convenience" with another woman. Heartbroken, I married the reclusive billionaire Damon Levy and disappeared.
Three years later, I returned, pregnant with our second child. The first person I saw was Bennett, now working as a driver, holding a sign for "Mrs. Levy."
He and his new wife didn't recognize me. They publicly humiliated me, mocking my simple dress and calling the priceless diamond bracelet from my husband a cheap fake.
At a gala, their cruelty escalated. They tripped me, stomped on my hand, and shattered my bracelet. Bennett slapped me across the face, hissing at me to stop lying.
Surrounded by their laughter, with my lip bleeding, I saw the man I once loved for the hollow, cruel person he truly was.
But then, the room went silent. My husband, Damon, walked in, holding our son. And my little boy pointed a finger straight at Bennett and shouted, "Papa! That bad man hit Mommy!"
Chapter 1
The pen hovered over the marriage license, a simple, stark document that promised a future I had dreamed of for seven years. My hand trembled, but it wasn't from excitement. It was from the chill spreading through my veins. Bennett wasn' t there. He was supposed to be, right by my side.
I looked at the empty chair beside me. The clerk cleared her throat. She had probably seen this a hundred times. A woman waiting, a man missing.
Then the office door burst open. Not Bennett. It was Jade Dunlap, her perfect blonde hair shining under the fluorescent lights, her smile a cruel slash across her face. And then I saw him. Bennett, walking in behind her, his hand resting casually on her lower back. My stomach dropped.
He didn't even look at me first. His eyes were on the clerk, a practiced charm already in place. Jade leaned in, whispering something in his ear, and they both chuckled. My lungs compressed.
"Addison," Bennett said, finally turning to me. His voice was smooth, too smooth. Like he was talking to a child, or a stranger. He didn't blink at my wide, trembling eyes. "I'm so sorry. Something urgent came up."
Urgent. This was our day. Our marriage license. My heart felt like it was being squeezed in a vise.
"What do you mean, 'urgent'?" My voice was a thin, reedy whisper I barely recognized.
Jade stepped forward, her expensive perfume suddenly suffocating. "Oh, darling. Bennett's so dedicated. He has to secure a critical business deal for Aurelis Capital. And for my son's inheritance, of course."
She smiled at me, a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "It's a temporary arrangement. A marriage of convenience. He promised me it would only last a month."
A month. My world tilted. My seven years, our shared dreams, reduced to a temporary inconvenience.
"You're marrying her?" The words were a physical pain tearing through my throat.
Bennett finally met my gaze. There was no apology, no remorse. Just a cold calculation. "It's for the firm, Addison. For our future. Just one month. I'll be back."
He honestly believed I would wait. He truly thought his "offer" to take me back was an act of charity. My vision blurred.
I glanced around the small, sterile office. The clerk looked away, embarrassed. The security guard at the door shifted uncomfortably. They knew. They saw the humiliation.
Seven years. Seven years of supporting his ambitions, cheering his small victories, comforting him through his failures. Seven years of pouring my heart into us, into him. I had sacrificed my own dreams, put my career on hold, all for the promise of "our future."
And now, "our future" was a month-long marriage to another woman.
Something inside me snapped. It wasn't a sudden explosion, but a quiet, definitive break. The Addison who loved Bennett, who believed in his promises, she ceased to exist in that moment.
"No," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "You won't."
Bennett frowned, irritation flashing in his eyes. "Addison, don't be dramatic. This is business."
Jade linked her arm through his. "She's always been a bit much, hasn't she, darling?"
He didn't correct her. He just looked at me, waiting for me to understand, to accept.
But I saw him for what he was. A hollow man, chasing shadows of power, willing to sacrifice anything, anyone, for his own perceived gain. The man I loved was a ghost.
That night, I accepted the marriage proposal from Damon Levy. The terrifyingly powerful, reclusive tech billionaire my parents had been trying to set me up with for months. I needed an escape. I needed to disappear.
I left New York without a word, without a backward glance. The city that held so many memories, so many broken promises, faded in my rearview mirror.
Three years passed. Three years that reshaped me, rebuilt me.
Now, I was back.
The humid New York air hit me as I stepped off the private jet. My stomach fluttered, not with nerves, but with the gentle stirrings of the life growing inside me. My second child.
Damon had arranged for a private car to pick me up. He was notoriously private, and always ensured my comfort and safety. I wore a simple, elegant ivory silk dress that draped perfectly over my growing belly, and my hair was pulled back in a loose, effortless bun. My only jewelry was the custom-made diamond bracelet Damon had given me for our anniversary, its unique design shimmering subtly on my wrist. It was a piece that spoke of understated luxury, not overt flashiness.
As I walked into the bustling arrivals hall, my eyes scanned for a driver with a sign. The crowd parted around me, a natural deference to the quiet confidence I now exuded. I found the sign, clutched in the hand of a man whose face, even after three years, was instantly recognizable.
Bennett Reed.
My breath hitched. The air seemed to solidify around me. Bennett, holding a sign that read, "Mrs. Levy."
He hadn't seen me yet. His eyes darted nervously through the crowd, a forced smile on his face. He looked... older. More stressed. But the arrogance still clung to him like cheap cologne.
My gaze drifted to his wrist. A familiar gold watch gleamed there. The one I had saved for, for months, to buy him as a graduation gift. A bitter taste filled my mouth. He was still wearing it.
He finally spotted me. His eyes widened, then narrowed in confusion. He clearly didn't recognize me, not truly. He was looking for a "Mrs. Levy," someone grander, perhaps older, certainly more ostentatious than the woman standing before him.
Then his eyes landed on the diamond bracelet on my wrist. A flicker of something, curiosity perhaps, crossed his face, quickly replaced by a dismissive sneer.
"Addison?" he said, a mixture of disbelief and condescension in his voice. "Is that really you?"
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