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Too Late, Mr. Winters: I'm No Victim

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 482    |    Released on: 30/01/2026

ng. In, out. In, out. She was on a mandatory "tour of the grounds" wit

he air. A black Maybach rolled through

near the front portico, bending dow

to wait for the second

n't see inside, but she knew who was there. She could

They're here!" Claudine came running dow

opened the rear passenger door. A r

heeled him out.

His head was tilted slightly to the side, his eyes open but unfocused, a thin line of spittle

e wiped her hands

touching him. "Ellery! Darling! You came!" She glared at Arla. "W

over Claudine, over the house

. A microscopic, momentary sharpening o

ated shock flashed in the depths of his eyes be

long. She smiled, a crooked, dangero

d, her voice dripping with a faux, syr

ust under his ear, gav

e turning behind the vacant fac

The two y

s a performance of confusion, but Arl

las said smoothly, stepping in to s

of the handles. "Oh, you poo

p back. She smo

ire into the decaying mansion. Her heart ha

had jus

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Too Late, Mr. Winters: I'm No Victim
Too Late, Mr. Winters: I'm No Victim
“I lived in Ellery Winters' penthouse for two years, playing the role of the quiet, unremarkable girl who fixed his financial messes in the dark. I thought we had a partnership, until I walked in to find my belongings packed in a black garbage bag near the door. Ellery stood by the floor-to-ceiling window, a silhouette of ice, refusing to even look at me. On the marble table sat a "Termination of Relations" agreement and a one-million-dollar check. "Sign it," he said, his voice devoid of any warmth. He was discarding me to marry my sister, Claudine, as part of a strategic merger with the Fitzgeralds-the very family that had abandoned me to the foster system years ago. My mother, Victoria, didn't want a daughter; she wanted a tool to secure the Winters' fortune. Silas, his assistant, looked at me with pity, expecting the "trailer park girl" to break down and beg for the hush money. They all thought I was a nobody, a line item to be deleted from the balance sheet of their lives so they could move on to their high-society wedding. I felt a cold, sharp rage bubbling up, the kind that only someone who has lived in the shadows can truly feel. I didn't beg, and I didn't scream. I just looked at the man I had protected for two years and realized he had no idea who I actually was. Why did they think I was helpless? Why did Ellery believe he could buy my silence when I knew every dirty secret buried in his Cayman accounts? I ripped the million-dollar check into confetti and dropped it in the trash. As I stepped back into the decaying Fitzgerald mansion as an "Honorary Ward," I wasn't coming home for a reunion-I was coming to dismantle both of their empires from the inside.”