Billionaire Shattered His Pregnant Wife’s Arm After His Mistress Lied—Then America’s Most Feared Woman Walked Through the Door

Billionaire Shattered His Pregnant Wife’s Arm After His Mistress Lied—Then America’s Most Feared Woman Walked Through the Door

The first thing Grant Huxley did after breaking his pregnant wife’s arm was step over her like she was a dropped coat.

The second thing he did was tell his mistress, “Don’t worry. She won’t be a problem after tonight.”

And the third thing he did was freeze when the elevator doors opened and Senator Victoria Wren walked into his marble penthouse with two federal marshals behind her.

Ava Huxley did not scream.

That was what everyone remembered later.

Not the blood at the corner of her mouth.

Not the pale blue silk of her maternity dress, torn at one shoulder.

Not even the unnatural angle of her left wrist where she had caught herself against the edge of the glass coffee table.

They remembered that she stayed quiet.

Quiet enough to hear the ice melting in Grant’s untouched whiskey.

Quiet enough to hear Savannah Vale’s diamond bracelet trembling against her champagne flute.

Quiet enough to hear the private elevator climb from the lobby, floor by floor, bringing up the one woman Grant Huxley had spent ten years trying to impress and thirty-seven minutes trying to keep out.

Ava sat on the floor beside the white leather sofa, one hand braced protectively over her eight-month belly.

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Her breath came thin.

Measured.

Controlled.

Her wedding ring had rolled under the table when she fell. She did not reach for it.

Grant stood over her in a midnight-blue tuxedo jacket, his jaw clenched hard enough to whiten the skin at his temples.

Savannah was behind him, wrapped in a red satin gown that looked too bright against the gray winter skyline beyond the windows.

Ava had heard the whisper.

Everyone in the room had heard the whisper.

“She’s been talking to reporters,” Savannah had breathed into Grant’s ear. “She’s going to ruin the merger. She said the baby might not even be yours.”

It had been a surgical little lie.

Not loud.

Not dramatic.

Just soft enough to sound private and poisonous enough to reach the part of Grant that cared more about control than truth.

Ava had seen the change in him before his hand even moved.

His eyes went flat.

His mouth tightened.

His fingers closed around her upper arm.

And then pain flashed white through the room.

Now Grant looked down at her as if she had embarrassed him by not disappearing.

“Get up,” he said.

Ava lifted her eyes.

“Call an ambulance.”

Savannah gave a tiny laugh. “That’s a little theatrical, don’t you think?”

Ava looked at her once.

Only once.

Savannah stopped smiling.

There were women who cried when betrayed.

There were women who begged.

There were women who threw glasses, ripped dresses, shouted names, and handed men the scene they needed to call them unstable.

Ava Huxley did none of those things.

She breathed.

She counted.

She remembered.

She remembered the security camera above the fireplace, hidden inside the black marble seam.

She remembered the baby monitor app still running on her phone because Grant hated when staff used the nursery corridor after 8 p.m.

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