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Too Late For The Billionaire's Regret

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 873    |    Released on: 04/06/2026

. Antiseptic. Bleach. It clawed at the back of her throat, a chemical sharpness that was wrong. Hospitals smelled sterile, but this was different. This was the smell of something trying too

, pushing a small metal cart. But her eyes weren't the kind

lling it with a clear liquid. She advanced towa

to help you rest," the wo

is was an execution. She tried to scramble away, to scream,

the dim light as it nea

inward, ripped from its hing

essed in impeccable black tactical suits that

s suppressor a dark cylinder of silence, and fired. There was a soft phut,

an instant. He wrapped her in a thick, heavy c

ured, his voice a low rumble.

to his arms as if she weighed nothing, moving swiftly dow

ing in the back alley. They placed her in the back seat,

ry rooms, physical therapy, and quiet grief. Days bled into wee

years

ower in Manhattan was breathtaking. It was a

window, a glass of whiskey in his h

ty, no official records. It's like Cora Burton ceased to exist four years ago.However, we've intercepted intelligence suggesting a significant financial transa

uckles turned white around the crystal glass.

nd thick, welled up, dripping onto the pristine

dollars. I don't care if you have to excavate every inch of this planet.But first,

aving Harlan alone in the encroaching darkness, a prisoner

JFK, the wind howled as a Gulfstream G650, i

r of legs, clad in red-soled

sized black sunglasses. The broken girl was gone. In her place stood a woman carv

large black umbrella to shield her from the wind. Bishop

ep breath of the cold New York air, her eyes sharp, h

er's release?" she asked, her voice

eady, Ms. Burton. The paro

ush leather seat of a wai

on unreadable. "Take me to the

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Too Late For The Billionaire's Regret
Too Late For The Billionaire's Regret
“I was happily preparing to tell Harlan, my lover of five years, that I was pregnant with our child. But when I pushed open his study door, I heard him ordering the ruthless liquidation of my father's company. He wasn't just my family's head of security; he was Harlan Sinclair, a Wall Street predator. He threw a hostile takeover agreement at my feet and sneered that the baby in my belly was a bastard. "Take the money, get rid of that child, and get out of my sight forever." My best friend Kali had forged a DNA report and drugged me to steal him, and he believed every word. Stumbling out into the pouring rain, I was violently struck by a speeding truck. As my blood pooled on the wet asphalt and my baby's life slipped away, Kali stepped out of a luxury SUV just to smile at my agony. Later, in a grim underground clinic, a fake nurse raised a lethal syringe to finish the job. I didn't understand how five years of deep love could be shattered by a single cheap lie. I understood even less how the man who once swore to protect me could so coldly condemn our unborn child to death. Rescued by my father's loyal guards at the last possible second, I vanished into the shadows. Four years later, I stepped off a private jet in New York. The naive, broken Cora was dead; I had returned to make them all crawl.”