The subtitle read:
HEARTBROKEN HUSBAND FIGHTS BILLIONAIRE FAMILY FOR UNBORN CHILD.
“I only want my wife back,” Grant told the camera, voice cracking. “I made mistakes. Business pressure changed me. But I love Maya, and I have a right to be present for the birth of my child. Her powerful new family is trying to erase me.”
He had already abandoned Vanessa publicly, feeding her to the tabloids and recasting himself as the repentant husband of a suddenly wealthy wife.
“I can silence him,” Jonathan said from the doorway.
I turned.
My father stood there with his cane, his eyes fixed on Grant’s performance with lethal calm.
“One call,” he said. “His firm loses licensing by noon. His accounts freeze. He disappears.”
A month earlier, Grant’s performance would have terrified me. I would have believed everyone. I would have believed the cameras, the tears, the lies.
But now, looking at the financial data scrolling across another monitor, I felt something different.
Clarity.
“No, Dad,” I said.
The word Dad still felt heavy and new on my tongue.
Jonathan raised an eyebrow.
“If you crush him with Meridian’s power, he becomes a victim,” I said. “He’ll claim the cruel billionaire stole his wife and child. He’ll write a book. He’ll collect sympathy. Men like Grant feed on attention, even when it’s negative.”
I swiped a spreadsheet to the center monitor.
“His firm is overleveraged on the upcoming NovaCore acquisition. He needs fifty million dollars in bridge financing by Friday or his fund collapses. Investors panic. Regulators investigate. Everything burns.”
Jonathan stepped closer.
“And?”
“And,” I said, watching Grant fake tears on television, “I want Meridian to be the anonymous syndicate offering that bridge loan.”
“You want to save him?”
“No,” I said. “I want him to think he has won. I want him to sign the agreement. I want him to put his personal assets, his penthouse, his cars, his firm, everything, up as collateral.”
My voice dropped.
“I don’t want you to build his gallows. I want him to build it himself.”
The trap was set.
Meridian’s shell companies funneled the fifty million through blind trusts, giving Grant the lifeline he desperately needed.
Late Thursday night, I sat in the library reviewing the final clauses of the contract he was scheduled to sign the next morning. Every paragraph had been sharpened into a blade.
Then pain sliced across my abdomen.
I gasped, dropping the stylus.
Another contraction hit, tightening around my spine like iron.
I wasn’t due for three weeks.
Then I looked down and saw water spreading across the expensive rug beneath my chair.
The baby was coming.
And Grant was about to sign.
“You need to be in the medical wing now,” Dr. Monroe said in the foyer, her voice tight as she checked my vitals. “Your contractions are five minutes apart.”
“I have an hour,” I breathed, gripping the marble console as another contraction tore through me.
“Maya,” Jonathan growled, pacing with his cane, “this is madness. I will send the lawyers. You are going to the hospital.”
“No,” I snapped.
Everyone froze.
I forced myself upright.
“He took my dignity in person. I am taking his life apart in person. Get the car.”
Forty-five minutes later, I stood outside the conference room at Grant’s corporate headquarters downtown.
I wore a tailored crimson maternity suit, my hair pulled into a severe knot. Pain radiated through my body, but fury held my spine straight.
Through the glass wall, I saw Grant.
He had just opened a bottle of champagne. His board was gathered around the table, laughing, clapping, celebrating.
“To the NovaCore acquisition,” Grant said, raising his glass. “And to the next billion.”
I did not knock.
I pushed open the glass doors and walked in, flanked by Meridian lawyers and security.
The laughter died.
Grant turned.
The color drained from his face.
“Maya?” he said. “What are you doing here? The press said you were on bed rest.”
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