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Revenge Marriage: The Jilted Ballerina's Comeback

Chapter 4 4

Word Count: 750    |    Released on: 21/01/2026

kin with a loofah until it turned pink, trying to wash away the fe

the shower stall,

gered a

. Eight y

Jude's Prep. It was

obbing. She was sixteen. She had just been cut from the te

ps appr

hter ball, expecting

t on the Britannica

lton. He was wearing his b

was crying. He didn't

a pristine, monog

Flynn. Red isn

book, acting like sitting on the dusty library floor

pbell walked by the aisl

. Then he saw the headmaster talk

the donor, flashing his winning

Flas

to the present. Sh

d always been transactional. Even back th

t. It was huge on her, the hem hitting h

l the collar. It smelled l

that she

ut into the

hen island, talking on his phone.

ptable. Bloquez to

up as sh

he explai

d an iPad across the ma

'The Daily Look' this morning

drop. She walked over

creamed in bol

SING DUTY OVER

the first

nt due to Flynn's increasing emotional volatility and erratic behavior

gasped. "I never lo

xt line," Ch

orious playboy Charlton Bernard, confirm

using last night against you. He's making you the villain so he lo

aphne asked. "About

"He guessed. And we just g

to a barstool.

lause. They won't keep a scandal-ridden principal

tally. "You're already trending a

again. The panic from the night b

"No family. No fiancé. No jo

the island. He stood di

e counter, one on either s

ve me,"

eyes were intense, dem

aphne laughed bitterly. "Being with me just c

concluded, her should

" Charlton said, a glint appeari

and pulled out a thick do

n the counter n

f the Bernard Family T

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Revenge Marriage: The Jilted Ballerina's Comeback
Revenge Marriage: The Jilted Ballerina's Comeback
“I stood in the ballroom of the Pierre Hotel, holding a champagne flute that felt like a fragile anchor against a rising tide of anxiety. Across the room, the crowd of New York's elite parted as my fiancé, Campbell Brock, stepped onto the stage to announce a historic merger-and a shocking engagement to someone else. "I am proud to announce my engagement to Kandice Rose," he said, pulling the "real" daughter of the family into his arms while looking right through me as if I were a ghost. I dropped my glass, the crystal shattering at my feet, but the public humiliation was only the beginning. By the next morning, I was a viral meme dubbed the "Meltdown Girl," and the American Ballet Theatre had suspended me from my position as principal dancer for "moral turpitude." My bank accounts were frozen, my reputation was in tatters, and Kandice was on a livestream tearfully claiming I was a jealous foster girl who had tried to seduce Campbell behind her back. I had spent four years building a life with this man, only to be discarded like a piece of old wallpaper the moment a better business deal came along. How could the man who promised me a future turn me into a national joke overnight, and why was the world so eager to believe I was the villain in my own tragedy? When my high school best friend, the notorious billionaire playboy Charlton Bernard, found me drinking tequila in a dive bar, he didn't offer me a shoulder to cry on. He slid a marriage contract across the table and pressed a black titanium credit card into my hand. "Marry me for a year, Daphne," he said, his eyes burning with a dark, protective intensity that made my heart race. "We'll join their reality show as newlyweds and show the world exactly who the real winner is." I looked at the card, then at the man who had always been my shadow, and realized that being sensible had only gotten me dumped on a stage. "Let's go get married."”