"That's not possible," Chloe said, her voice tighter than she intended. Her fingers found the cool, smooth band of the platinum ring on her left hand, twisting it nervously. It was a habit, a small, unconscious gesture she made whenever she felt anxious. Lately, she felt anxious all the time.
The cold war with Julian had stretched into its third day. This trip was meant to be an olive branch. She'd imagined getting a decorative copy of their marriage certificate, framing it, a silly, sentimental gesture to remind them of the beginning. To break the silence.
"We were married two years ago," Chloe insisted, pulling out her phone. She swiped to a photo of the certificate, the elegant calligraphy mocking her from the screen. She pushed the phone across the counter. "See?"
Ms. Davis barely glanced at it. She typed something into her keyboard, her expression unchanging. "The certificate number format is incorrect. And the state seal is a counterfeit. A decent one, but fake."
The clerk's voice softened with a hint of pity, the kind reserved for fools and lost causes. "I see this sometimes. You're not the first."
Fake.
The word echoed in the sudden, roaring silence of Chloe's mind. The bustling sounds of the office faded away. Her fingertips went numb, then ice-cold. The platinum ring on her finger suddenly felt like a shackle, heavy and foreign.
She somehow managed to walk out of the building, her movements stiff and robotic. The bright Manhattan sun was a physical blow, making her eyes water. She stumbled to her car, the reality of the situation refusing to form a coherent thought. It had to be a mistake. A clerical error.
Her hands moved on their own instinct, starting the engine and steering the vehicle toward Midtown Manhattan, toward Hawthorne Industries. Deep down, she still clung to the last sliver of hope: that Julian would laugh off this chaos, explain everything clearly, and tell her this was just a stupid administrative error.
Her mind was a maelstrom of confusion and denial. The traffic was a blur of yellow and red. A horn blared. The screech of tires was the only thing that broke through the fog.
There was a jolt. A sharp, ugly sound of metal on metal. Her head snapped forward, striking the steering wheel with a dull thud.
Pain, sharp and immediate, radiated from her forehead. The other driver was yelling. Someone was calling the police. The world swam back into focus, hazy and distorted.
A police officer, calm and professional, suggested she go to the emergency room for a check-up. Chloe agreed numbly, letting the process carry her along.
In the sterile, white coldness of the ER, a kind-faced doctor named Evans cleaned the small cut on her forehead. He was thorough, ordering a full set of precautionary tests.
While she waited for the results, her phone buzzed with an unknown number. She ignored it. Her world was already tilting on its axis; she couldn't handle another unknown.
Dr. Evans returned, holding a tablet. "Well, Ms. Sterling, everything looks good. Just a minor concussion, but all your other tests came back perfect."
He swiped through her chart on the tablet, his brow furrowing slightly as he read a note from her primary care physician. "It says here you've had some difficulty conceiving?"
Chloe's stomach clenched. "Yes. We've been trying."
The doctor looked up from the tablet, offering a reassuring smile. "Well, based on these results, there's absolutely no physiological reason you can't get pregnant. You're perfectly healthy."
His words were meant to be comforting. Instead, they were a lightning strike that split her world in two.
"It's never your fault, Chloe. There's something wrong with our compatibility all along." Julian's soft, sorrowful voice echoed clearly in her memory. He had always shifted all the blame onto himself superficially, yet his subtle tone and hidden disappointment always made her firmly believe that she was the defective one incapable of giving birth. For two long years, she had lived in self-blame and inferiority, convinced she was a flawed wife. Every bit of that pain was built on his deliberate lie.
The phone buzzed again. The same unknown number. This time, she answered, her hand trembling.
"Is this Chloe Sterling?" a man's voice asked, formal and deep.
"Yes."
"My name is Arthur Sullivan. I'm the executor of the estate of Marcus Sterling."
Chloe's mind went blank. She didn't know anyone by that name.
"I'm afraid I have some difficult news," the lawyer continued. "Mr. Sterling passed away last week. He was your biological father. He has named you as the sole heir to his entire estate."
The words were nonsense. A prank. "You have the wrong person. I'm an orphan."
"We have a DNA test on file, Ms. Sterling, conducted when you were an infant. It's conclusive. If you could come to my office, there are some documents that require your signature."
She hung up without saying goodbye. She sat on the cold, vinyl bench of the hospital corridor, the world spinning violently. A fake marriage. A fake infertility problem. A fake orphan status.
One thing had to be real. She needed an explanation. She needed it from Julian.
She drove the rest of the way to Hawthorne Industries on pure adrenaline. The receptionist tried to stop her, but faltered, recognizing the CEO's wife. She waved Chloe through to the executive elevator.
The plush carpet of the top floor muffled her footsteps. As she approached Julian's corner office, she saw the heavy oak door was slightly ajar. She could hear low voices from within.
She recognized one of them immediately. A soft, breathy voice that had haunted the edges of her marriage for two years. Seraphina Bloom. Her former college advisor, now Julian's "close confidante."
"Julian, we've been secretly married for five years," Seraphina's voice was thick with tears. "How much longer do I have to wait? Mason needs a father, a real one."
Chloe's blood turned to ice.
Julian's voice was a low, soothing murmur. The same voice he used to calm her fears. "Darling, it's almost over. As soon as the company's IPO is complete, I'll 'divorce' Chloe. Her connection us the support we needed from the old-money investors. Her purpose is served."
Purpose. Served.
She wasn't a wife. She wasn't even a person. She was a tool. A key to unlock a door, now ready to be discarded.
Every breath she had ever taken with him, every meal shared, every whispered promise in the dark-it was all a meticulously crafted lie. The foundation of her life crumbled into dust.
She didn't push the door open. She didn't scream. A terrifying calm washed over her, cold and absolute. She turned, her movements silent and precise, and walked back to the elevator. There were no tears on her face, only the stillness of a frozen lake.
She pulled out her phone, her fingers steady. She dialed the number for Arthur Sullivan.
He answered on the first ring.
"Mr. Sullivan," she said, her voice even and clear, devoid of any emotion. "Where are the documents? I'm on my way to sign them now."
The elevator doors slid open slowly. She stepped inside and stared at her own reflection on the polished brass wall: a pale woman with hollow eyes, a complete stranger compared to her former naive self.
Then, little by little, a faint, icy smirk tugged at the corner of her lips.
The revenge game had officially begun.