CEO Locked Down The Birth Ward—But His Wife Had Already Sold £1.2B-Teptep

On the day the secretary gave birth, my CEO husband stationed 40 guards to prevent me from causing a scene.

But his assistant told him, “Your wife is not in the country. She sold £1.2B worth of shares and left a long time ago.”

My mother-in-law was the first person to explain my humiliation to me as if it were a household duty.

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She did not shout.

She did not look embarrassed.

She sat at the end of the dining table with a porcelain cup in her hand, her posture so straight it made the rest of the room seem untidy.

The tea had only just been poured, and the steam drifted between us like a curtain neither of us intended to pull back.

“Men have their fun, Serafina,” she said.

Her voice was soft enough for the housekeeper in the doorway to pretend she had not heard.

“Let the assistant give birth. Then we’ll bring the child home and raise him under your name. You must have the elegance to tolerate this.”

Elegance.

People like my mother-in-law had a gift for turning cruelty into etiquette.

If a woman cried, she lacked breeding.

If a woman objected, she lacked perspective.

If a woman was betrayed and still managed to stand upright, they called it elegance and expected her to be grateful for the compliment.

My husband stood by the window with his phone in one hand, answering messages while his mother disposed of my dignity for him.

Alister never wasted his own energy on domestic unpleasantness when someone else could perform it on his behalf.

He was ruthless in business and colder at home.

People called it focus.

I had once called it strength.

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