He Claimed Her Mansion With His Mistress There. Then The Lock Turned Red-Teptep

“Everything here is mine now, baby,” Preston Vale said, and Eliza heard it seven miles away.

The crystal decanter flashed in the front-hall light as he lifted it like a trophy.

Beside him, Marissa Lane laughed softly, the kind of laugh people use when they believe they have just been invited into a richer life.

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Preston loved that sound.

He guided her past the limestone wall, the floating staircase, the white sofa, and the indoor olive tree Eliza had chosen after three months of arguments with an architect who thought beauty should never require maintenance.

He moved through the glass-and-stone mansion above Palo Alto as if every inch of it obeyed him.

What he did not know was that none of it belonged to him.

Not the marble.

Not the cars.

Not the wine cellar.

Not the view.

Not even the side-gate code he had given Marissa with a wink.

At the Rosewood Sand Hill, Eliza Vale sat fully dressed at a desk with her laptop open and watched the live security feed.

The air conditioner hummed softly.

Her phone case clicked beneath one steady thumbnail.

She did not look like a woman about to break.

She looked like a woman who had finished preparing.

When Preston dropped Marissa’s coat over Eliza’s white sofa, Eliza picked up her phone and called her attorney.

“Tomorrow morning,” she said, “we end this.”

Her attorney was quiet for a moment.

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