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From Abandoned Wife To Powerful Heiress

My marriage ended at a charity gala I organized. One moment, I was the pr**nant, happy wife of tech mogul Gabe Sullivan; the next, a reporter's phone screen announced to the world that he and his childhood sweetheart, Harper, were expecting a child. Across the room, I saw them together, his hand resting on her stomach. This wasn't just an af**ir; it was a public declaration that erased me and our unborn baby. To protect his company's billion-dollar IPO, Gabe, his mother, and even my own adoptive parents conspired against me. They moved Harper into our home, into my bed, treating her like royalty while I became a prisoner. They painted me as unstable, a threat to the family's image. They accused me of cheating and claimed my child wasn't his. The final command was unthinkable: terminate my pr**nancy. They locked me in a room and scheduled the procedure, promising to drag me there if I refused. But they made a mistake. They gave me back my phone to keep me quiet. Feigning surrender, I made one last, desperate call to a number I had kept hidden for years-a number belonging to my biological father, Antony Dean, the head of a family so powerful, they could make my husband's world burn.
Chapter 1 Charlotte Jennings POV: I learned my marriage was ending the same way the rest of the world did: in a blinding flash of a camera at a charity gala I had organized. One moment, I was smiling, a glass of sparkling water held delicately in my hand, my mind on the baby growing inside me-our secret, our joy. The next, a reporter shoved a phone in my face, the screen glowing with a breaking news alert. "Mrs. Sullivan, any comment on your husband's big announcement?" The headline was stark, brutal. Tech Mogul Gabe Sullivan and Childhood Sweetheart Harper Nicholson Expecting First Child. The air in my lungs turned to ice. My smile froze on my face, a brittle mask that felt like it might crack and shatter. I could feel hundreds of eyes on me, the whispers starting to ripple through the opulent ballroom like a wave of poison. I turned, my movements slow, robotic. And there he was. My husband, Gabe. He was standing across the room with Harper Nicholson, his hand resting possessively on the small of her back. She was looking up at him with tear-filled, adoring eyes, her own hand protectively cradling a barely-there bump on her stomach. They were a perfect picture. A loving couple sharing a beautiful secret with the world. A secret that was supposed to be mine. The reporter, a vulture sensing a k**l, moved closer. "Is it true you and Mr. Sullivan have been living separately?" Panic flared in Gabe's eyes as he finally saw me. He saw the reporter, the phone, the crumbling expression on my face. His grip on Harper tightened for a split second before he let go, his face paling. Our eyes met across the crowded room. In that single, suspended moment, the seven years of our life together played out and died. The late nights when I'd helped him brainstorm the code for his first app, the way he'd held me when my adoptive parents criticized my career choice, the whispered promise last week that our baby, our son, would have the love neither of us ever truly had. It all turned to ash. A cold, quiet rage began to build in my ch**t, a glacial force pushing aside the shock. I started walking toward him. The murmurs in the room fell silent, the crowd parting before me like the Red Sea. The only sound was the steady, deliberate click of my heels on the marble floor. Each step was a hammer blow against the foundation of our marriage. I stopped directly in front of him. I didn't look at Harper. My entire world had narrowed to Gabe's handsome, treacherous face. "You have a sixty-second head start to come up with a lie that I might actually believe," I said, my voice dangerously low, stripped of all warmth. He opened his mouth, his charismatic charm already kicking in. "Lottie, baby, it's not what it looks like. Let's go home and I can explain everything." I didn't let him finish. My hand moved on its own, a blur of motion. The crack of my palm against his cheek echoed in the cavernous silence of the ballroom. A collective g**p rippled through our audience. Gabe stood there, stunned, the red imprint of my hand blooming on his skin. He didn't look angry. He just looked... caught. "Please, don't blame Gabe!" Harper's voice was a saccharine wh**per, laced with faux fragility as she stepped between us, placing a hand on his ch**t. "It was all my fault. I... I was lonely. He was just being kind." Her eyes, glistening with perfectly timed tears, locked onto mine. There was no apology in them. Only triumph. The rage inside me finally broke through the ice, and a single, hot tear escaped, tracing a path down my cold cheek. I felt the last of my composure shattering. Gabe reached for me, his voice a desperate rasp. "Lottie, please." He tried to pull me into his arms, but I flinched away from his touch as if burned. "Don't touch me," I choked out. His publicist materialized at his side, whispering urgently in his ear. Gabe's jaw tightened. He looked from the publicist, to the sea of watching faces, to Harper's pleading expression, and finally, back to me. The calculation in his eyes was sickening. "The baby is mine," he said, his voice now clear and firm, not for me, but for everyone listening. "Harper and I have a long history. We're going to get through this together." Harper let out a soft sob and leaned into him, burying her face in his expensive suit. He wrapped an arm around her, holding her close. A protective gesture. A gesture he hadn't offered me, his pr**nant wife, standing alone in the wreckage he'd created. "Gabe, what are you saying?" I whispered, the words catching in my throat. "What about our baby?" He finally looked at me, his eyes dark with a pain that I knew wasn't for me, but for himself. For the inconvenience I represented. "We'll talk at home," he muttered, his voice low and tight. He began to steer a weeping Harper toward the exit, his team closing ranks around them like a royal guard. He was leaving me. He was leaving me here, alone, to face the humiliation. I stood frozen as they walked away. The weight of his public declaration settled over me, a suffocating shroud. He hadn't just admitted to an af**ir. He had publicly claimed another woman's child and, in doing so, had erased ours. My legs gave out and I stumbled back, catching myself on a table laden with untouched ch**pagne glasses. The room started to spin. His company, Sullivan Tech, was on the verge of the biggest IPO in a decade. A scandal, a messy divorce, an illegitimate child-it would have been a disaster. But a tech mogul standing by his pr**nant childhood friend? That was a story of loyalty. It was noble. It was a lie that sacrificed me and our unborn child on the altar of his ambition. As one of his security guards approached to escort me out a side door, away from the prying eyes and flashing cameras, a sickening realization dawned. Gabe hadn't just made a mistake. He had made a choice. And he hadn't chosen me. He had chosen her.
Chapter 2 Charlotte Jennings POV: The ride back to our penthouse was silent, a thick, suffocating blanket of unspoken words filling the space between myself and Gabe's grim-faced driver. I stared out at the glittering lights of New York, but saw nothing. My mind was a chaotic storm of betrayal and disbelief. The home I had designed, the sanctuary I had built for us, now felt like a gilded cage waiting to close in on me. When we arrived, Gabe was already there, pacing the length of our living room, the city skyline a dramatic backdrop to his distress. He had shed his jacket and tie, his sleeves rolled up his forearms. He looked like a man preparing for a fight. He stopped when I walked in, his eyes searching my face. "Lottie." I said nothing. I walked past him to the floor-to-ceiling windows and stared down at the river, a dark, churning ribbon of black. "I know you're angry," he started, his voice soft, persuasive. The voice he used to close billion-dollar deals and charm skeptical investors. "You have every right to be. But you have to understand. The IPO..." "Don't," I cut him off, my voice flat. "Don't you dare talk to me about the IPO right now." "It's everything, Lottie! It's everything we've worked for!" "We?" I spun around, the fury I'd been suppressing finally erupting. "We worked for this? I was the one holding you up when you were ready to quit. I was the one who believed in you when your own family called you a failure. And this is how you repay me? By publicly humiliating me and claiming another woman's child?" "It's not like that!" he insisted, taking a step toward me. "Harper is... she's fragile. She has no one. Her family threw her out. She came to me for help." "And what am I, Gabe? Am I not fragile? Am I not carrying your child? Or does our baby not matter as much as the child of your childhood sweetheart?" The words hung in the air, heavy and poisonous. He flinched as if I'd slapped him again. "Of course our baby matters," he said, his voice dropping to a desperate wh**per. He knelt before me, taking my hands in his. His touch felt alien, wrong. I didn't pull away, my body frozen in shock. "Lottie, look at me. I love you. You are my wife. Nothing changes that." I stared down at the top of his head, at the man I loved kneeling at my feet, and felt nothing but a vast, empty coldness. "It's just for show," he continued, his words tumbling out in a rush. "A story for the press. Once the IPO is finalized, everything will go back to normal. We'll expose the truth, I promise. I'll tell the world that you are the one carrying my heir. We will quietly adopt our own child. Legally, it will be clean. No one will ever know." The sheer audacity of his plan stole my breath. He wanted me to hide my own pr**nancy. To give birth to our son in secret, only to "adopt" him later, all to protect his public image and his company's stock price. He was asking me to accept that our child would be born a di**y secret, while Harper's would be celebrated. "You're insane," I whispered, pulling my hands from his grasp. "Absolutely insane." "It's the only way!" he pleaded, getting to his feet. "My mother is already on board. Your parents, too. They all agree this is the best solution to protect the family and the business." The mention of our families felt like a physical blow. His mother, Eleanor Sullivan, a woman who valued social standing above all else, had always seen me as an accessory to her son's success. And my adoptive parents, the Jennings, who had taken me in as a child but never truly loved me, were social climbers of the highest order. Of course they would side with Gabe. The Sullivan fortune was a prize they would do anything to remain attached to. "You told them?" I asked, my voice trembling. "You discussed the fate of my child with them before you even spoke to me?" "I had to manage the crisis, Lottie!" "This isn't a crisis, Gabe! This is our life! Our family! Our son!" My voice cracked on the last word. I wrapped my arms around my stomach, a primal instinct to protect the tiny life he was so willing to sacrifice. "And I am protecting him!" he yelled, his frustration boiling over. "I am protecting his future! The fortune he is set to inherit!" "He doesn't need a fortune!" I screamed back, tears streaming down my face. "He needs a father who will acknowledge him! A father who won't trade his legitimacy for a stock ticker symbol!" He ran a hand through his hair, his composure finally breaking. He looked cornered, desperate. "What do you want from me, Charlotte?" He used my full name. He only ever did that when he was trying to distance himself, to turn a personal conflict into a business negotiation. "I want a divorce," I said, the words tasting like acid. His face went slack with shock. "No. Absolutely not. A divorce right now is out of the question. It would be a disaster." "I don't care about your disaster, Gabe. You've created mine." He strode over to me, grabbing my arms. His grip was tight, bordering on painful. "You are not divorcing me. You are not leaving this apartment. We are going to see this through, as a family. Do you understand?" The threat was unmistakable. I was a prisoner in my own home. His home. He had the money, the power, the family support. I had nothing. The doorbell rang, a sharp, intrusive sound that made us both jump. Gabe released me and went to the door. My heart sank when I saw who it was. Harper. She stood there, looking small and helpless, an overnight bag at her feet. Behind her stood Gabe's mother, Eleanor, her face a mask of cold disapproval, and my own adoptive parents, their expressions a mixture of greed and pity. The enemy had arrived. And they were moving in. Eleanor swept past Gabe without a word to him, her icy gaze landing on me. "Charlotte. We need to talk." My fate, it seemed, was no longer in my hands. It was a business transaction, and I was the liability being managed.
Chapter 3 Charlotte Jennings POV: "Get her things out of the master bedroom," Eleanor Sullivan commanded, not looking at me but at one of the household staff who had materialized in the foyer. Her voice was as sharp and cold as shattered glass. "Harper needs rest. The guest wing is too far from the main living area for a woman in her delicate condition." Gabe said nothing. He just stood by the door, his face a grim, unreadable mask, as Harper offered me a small, tremulous smile of pure, venomous victory. My adoptive mother, Carol Jennings, rushed to Harper's side, clucking over her like a hen. "You poor dear, you must be exhausted. Let's get you settled in." My adoptive father, Robert, simply gave me a look of profound disappointment, as if my very presence was a stain on the family's reputation. I was being usurped in my own home, and my husband, the man who had vowed to protect me, was standing by and letting it happen. The staff, loyal to the man who signed their paychecks, began moving my clothes, my books, my life, out of the room I had shared with Gabe and into a small, sterile guest room at the back of the penthouse. The master suite, with its panoramic views of the city and the bed where our child was conceived, was now hers. "This is temporary, Charlotte," Gabe said later, after the jackals had settled their chosen one into her new den. He found me standing in the middle of the cramped guest room, surrounded by boxes of my belongings. "Just until the media attention dies down." "Temporary?" I echoed, my voice hollow. "You've moved another woman into our bed, Gabe. There is nothing temporary about that." "It's for appearances!" he hissed, his patience wearing thin. "Harper needs to be seen here. My mother insisted. It solidifies the story." "And what about our story? What about the truth?" "The truth doesn't matter right now! Only the narrative does!" Over the next few days, my life became a waking nightmare. I was a ghost in my own home. Gabe was consumed with work, orchestrating the IPO launch, and when he was home, he was with Harper. I would hear them laughing in the living room, see them sharing meals on the terrace. Eleanor had taken over the household, directing the staff to cater to Harper's every whim, from organic prenatal smoothies to specialized pillows. My own pr**nancy was ignored. A non-entity. When I experienced morning sickness, the cook told me Mrs. Sullivan had instructed her to prepare only the foods on Harper's approved diet plan. When I tried to speak to Gabe, he was always in a meeting or on a call. He was avoiding me, hiding behind the wall of his ambition. My adoptive parents were no better. They visited daily, not to see me, but to fawn over Harper and strategize with Eleanor about how best to present the "new family" to the press. They saw Harper's baby as a golden ticket, a direct heir to the Sullivan empire, and they were hitching their wagon to it with sickening enthusiasm. I was completely and utterly alone, a prisoner in a home that no longer felt like mine, carrying a child whose existence was an inconvenience to everyone. One afternoon, I found Harper in my studio. My private space. She was running her hands over my architectural models, a faint, condescending smile on her lips. "You're very talented," she said, without turning around. "It's a shame you'll have to give it all up." "I have no intention of giving anything up," I said, my voice tight. She finally turned to face me, her expression one of faux sympathy. "Oh, darling. You still don't get it, do you? You're the past, Charlotte. I'm the future. Gabe feels a responsibility to you, of course. But his heart... his heart has always been with me." "Get out of my studio," I said, my hands clenched into fists at my sides. "This isn't your studio anymore," she purred, trailing a finger along the edge of my drafting table. "Soon, this will be the nursery. Gabe and I were just discussing it. We think a celestial theme would be lovely, don't you?" Something inside me snapped. I lunged at her, my vision blurring with red-hot rage. I didn't know what I intended to do, only that I couldn't stand her smug, triumphant face for another second. But before I could reach her, a hand clamped down on my arm, yanking me back. It was Gabe. He had come in silently, drawn by our raised voices. He pulled me behind him, shielding Harper as if I were the threat. As if I were the monster. "Charlotte, what the h**l are you doing?" he demanded, his eyes blazing with anger. "She's trying to hurt the baby!" Harper cried, clutching her stomach and stumbling backward dramatically. "Gabe, I'm scared!" "I didn't touch her!" I yelled, struggling against his grip. "She's lying!" But Gabe wasn't looking at me anymore. He was looking at Harper, his expression softening with concern. He rushed to her side, helping her to a chair, speaking to her in low, soothing tones. He believed her. Without a moment's hesitation, he believed her over me. That was the moment I understood. This wasn't just about the IPO. This wasn't a temporary arrangement. This was a coup. And I had already lost. Later that evening, Eleanor Sullivan came to my room. She didn't knock. She entered with the air of a prison warden, my adoptive parents trailing behind her like obedient lapdogs. "You have become a problem, Charlotte," Eleanor said, her voice devoid of any emotion. "Your instability is a risk to the company. To my son. To my grandchild." She slid a document onto the small desk. A contract. "This is a post-nuptial agreement," she explained. "It outlines the terms of your future with Gabe. You will remain married until after the IPO. You will make no public statements. You will cede all parental rights of Harper's child to Gabe. In exchange, you will be well compensated." And then came the final, devastating blow. "Furthermore," she continued, her eyes as cold as a winter sea, "Harper has informed us that you were unfaithful to my son. She said you confessed to her that your child may not even be Gabe's. Given your violent outburst today, we cannot risk the scandal of a contested paternity. It is too messy." My bl**d ran cold. "That's a lie. That's a disgusting lie." "It doesn't matter," Eleanor said flatly. "The perception is what matters. Therefore, you will terminate the pr**nancy. Immediately." The air left my body. I looked from Eleanor's merciless face to my adoptive parents. They wouldn't meet my eyes. They were complicit. They were selling me, and my child, for a piece of the Sullivan pie. "No," I whispered, shaking my head in disbelief. "No. I won't." Eleanor's lips curved into a cruel smile. "I'm afraid you don't have a choice. The appointment is tomorrow morning. You can either walk in there yourself, or my men will carry you."
Chapter 4 Charlotte Jennings POV: The world shrank to the four walls of that guest room. They left me there, with the post-nup lying on the desk like a death sentence. The silence in the penthouse was a living thing, pressing in on me, suffocating me. I was trapped, with no allies, no escape. My phone had been taken away days ago, under the guise of "helping me disconnect from the stress." I was completely cut off. I paced the floor, a caged animal, my hand pressed against my stomach. My baby. Our son. They were talking about him like he was a tumor to be excised, a problem to be erased. The thought of their cold, clinical solution made bile rise in my throat. I tried the door. Locked from the outside. I was a literal prisoner. The hours crawled by. Night fell, painting the city in glittering, indifferent lights. I didn't sl**p. I sat in the dark, watching the headlights of cars moving freely on the streets below, a freedom I no longer had. My mind raced, searching for a way out. I thought about screaming, but who would hear me? Or rather, who would care? The staff were loyal to the Sullivans. I thought about breaking the window, but we were on the 80th floor. Desperation clawed at me. I thought of my adoptive parents, the people who were supposed to love and protect me. Their betrayal was a fresh, gaping wound. They had chosen money and status over their own daughter. I was an orphan all over again. And then, a memory surfaced. A faint, flickering ember in the darkness of my despair. I was not an orphan. Not really. When I was eighteen, just before I left for college, a letter had arrived. It was from a law firm, informing me that my biological parents had been searching for me. They had been young when I was born, forced to give me up, but they had never forgotten me. The letter contained a name and a private number. Antony Dean. At the time, I had been too hurt, too full of a child's anger at being abandoned, to respond. I was a Jennings. I had a family. Or so I thought. I had tucked the letter away in a box of old keepsakes and tried to forget it. But I hadn't forgotten the name. Antony Dean. I'd idly googled it once, years ago. The results had been staggering. The Dean family was old money, a global dynasty with influence in shipping, finance, and politics. They were notoriously private, their power immense but invisible. They were a world away from the flashy, new-money tech world of the Sullivans. It was a long shot. A desperate, crazy gamble. But it was the only one I had. I needed a phone. The next morning, when Gabe came to my room, his face was strained. He looked like he hadn't sl**t either. He held a tray with a glass of juice and a single croissant. A peace offering. "Lottie," he began, his voice rough with emotion. "I... I know this is hard to understand." "Hard to understand?" I laughed, a broken, humorless sound. "You're asking me to let your mother and that snake you brought into our home mu**er our child, and you think it's 'hard to understand'?" "Don't say that," he flinched, pain flashing in his eyes. "It's not mu**er. It's... it's a procedure. For the good of the family." "For the good of the stock price, you mean." He set the tray down, his hands shaking slightly. "I love you, Lottie. I swear I do. After this is all over, we can try again. We can have other children. As many as you want." The casual cruelty of his words knocked the air from my lungs. As if our son was a prototype to be discarded, easily replaced by a new model. I knew then that I couldn't fight him with emotion. He was immune to it. I had to use logic. His logic. I took a deep breath, forcing myself into a state of unnatural calm. I had to play the long game. "Okay," I said. He stared at me, shocked by my sudden acquiescence. "Okay?" "Okay, Gabe," I repeated, my voice steady. "If this is what has to be done to secure our future, then... okay. I'll do it." The relief that washed over his face was so profound it was almost comical. He was so desperate to believe I would fold, so eager to have his problem solved. "But I have one condition," I added. "Anything," he said immediately, his eyes shining with gratitude. "I want my phone back. And my laptop. I can't be locked in here like this. I'll go crazy. If I'm going to do this... this thing... I need a distraction. I need to work. I need to feel like I still have some control over my own life." He hesitated for a fraction of a second, a flicker of suspicion in his eyes. But his desire for an easy solution won out. He wanted the compliant wife, the partner who would make the necessary sacrifices. "Of course," he said, nodding eagerly. "Of course. I'll have them brought to you right away." He ki**ed my forehead, a gesture so full of false tenderness it made my skin crawl. "Thank you, Lottie. You won't regret this. I'll make it all up to you, I promise." He left, and a few minutes later, one of the security guards brought my phone and laptop. I waited, my heart pounding, until I was sure I was alone. My hands trembled as I unlocked my phone. I found the old email, the one containing the letter from the law firm. The number was still there. With a prayer on my lips, I dialed. I didn't know if the number was still active. I didn't know if they would even want to hear from me. But they were my only hope. The phone rang twice before a man with a calm, authoritative voice answered. "Hello?" "Hello," I whispered, tears choking my voice. "My name is Charlotte. I... I think you might be my father." ...... What happens next? Available chapters here are limited, click the button below to install the App and enjoy more exciting chapters (Automatically jump to this novel when you open the app) &2&
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