Chapter 1

For three years, I was the unrecognized genius bleeding for Marcus’s empire. On the night he was crowned the city's youngest billionaire tycoon, I stood in the shadows, waiting for the proposal he promised. Instead, I watched him pull my treacherous step-sister onto the stage, sliding a six-carat diamond onto her finger while presenting my life’s work as their joint masterpiece.

When I confronted him, his sneer was dripping with disgust: 'You belong hidden in a sterile lab, Elara. She belongs in the spotlight. Know your place.'

​Stripped of my legacy, my reputation, and my dignity, I was discarded in the freezing rain. That was where the bulletproof Maybach found me.

​Alexander Thorne. The ruthless tyrant of the business world. An apex predator who viewed human emotion as a disease—and the only man with the power to crush Marcus overnight.

He rolled down the window, his gaze lethal.

'I need a brilliant doctor to keep my sister breathing, and a wife who knows how to submit in public. You need a weapon. Get in.'

The contract was absolute: Two years of marriage, total obedience before the cameras, and absolute silence regarding his family. In exchange, he would grant me the unimaginable wealth and power to destroy the parasites who ruined me.

​Marcus thought he had buried a pathetic, obedient lab rat. Alexander thought he had bought a desperate, easily controlled doctor. As I signed the marriage certificate and became the untouchable Mrs. Thorne, they both failed to realize one fatal truth.

I didn't just want my research back. I was going to burn their empire to the ground.

The Grand Ballroom at the Celestine Hotel was packed wall to wall with the best minds in pharmaceutical research. Crystal chandeliers hung from the vaulted ceiling, casting warm light across round tables draped in white linen. Elara Vance sat at table twelve, her hands folded in her lap beneath the tablecloth where no one could see them shake.

She wore a silk emerald dress that she had bought three weeks ago specifically for tonight.

Tonight, when they would announce the lead scientist behind the Aethelgard Formula. Tonight, when three years of her life would finally mean something.

"Ladies and gentlemen," the MC said from the stage, his voice booming through the sound system. "It is my distinct honor to present this year's Golden Gala Award for Excellence in Pharmaceutical Innovation."

Elara's heart hammered against her ribs. She gripped the edge of the table.

"The lead scientist behind the groundbreaking Aethelgard Formula, which promises to revolutionize the treatment of degenerative neural conditions, is..." He paused for effect. The room held its breath.

Elara leaned forward.

"Dr. Isabella Cross!"

The words hit her like a physical blow. She sat frozen in her chair as applause erupted around her. The world tilted sideways. Her vision blurred at the edges.

No.

That wasn't right.

The people at her table were clapping around her but the sound felt distant, muffled, like she was underwater.

Dr. Isabella Cross rose from table three in a red gown that caught the light as she moved. She walked toward the stage with a practiced smile, one hand pressed to her chest in a gesture of surprise. Her blonde hair was styled in perfect waves that cascaded over one shoulder.

Elara waited for someone to stop her. To say there had been a mistake. To call out the real name.

Dr. Elara Vance.

But no one did.

Isabella reached the stage. She accepted the crystal trophy from the MC. The applause grew louder.

Elara's hands trembled beneath the table. She looked around the ballroom, searching for someone, anyone, who would see that this was wrong.

Her eyes found Marcus Sterling across the room.

He stood near the stage in a charcoal suit, his sandy hair swept back from his forehead. He was watching Isabella accept the award. Then he stepped forward, moving into the stage lights.

Relief flooded through Elara. Marcus would fix this. He knew the truth. He'd been there for every late night in the lab, every breakthrough, every failed experiment. He'd held her when she cried over contaminated samples. He'd celebrated with her when the synthesis finally worked.

Marcus climbed the steps to the stage. He walked to Isabella's side.

And he smiled.

He leaned in and kissed Isabella's cheek.

The room erupted in cheers.

Elara couldn't breathe. She stared at the stage, at Marcus standing beside Isabella, his hand resting on her lower back in a gesture that was far too familiar.

"Congratulations, Dr. Cross," Marcus said into the microphone, his voice warm and proud. "This award is well deserved. Your dedication to this project has been nothing short of extraordinary."

Isabella beamed at him. She stepped closer to the microphone.

"Thank you all so much," she said, her voice breathy with emotion. "This is such an incredible honor. I couldn't have done this without the support of my colleagues at Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals, especially Dr. Marcus Sterling, whose guidance has been invaluable."

The applause continued.

Elara's chair scraped against the floor as she stood. The sound cut through the noise. Heads turned toward her.

"Stop," she said.

Her voice was too quiet. No one heard her over the clapping.

"Stop!" she said again, louder this time.

The applause faltered, then died. Hundreds of faces turned toward table twelve.

Elara's legs felt unsteady beneath her, but she forced herself to take a step toward the stage. Her hands clenched into fists at her sides.

"There's been a mistake," she said.

The ballroom fell silent.

Marcus looked at her from the stage. His expression shifted from surprise to something else. Something cold.

"Elara," he said into the microphone. His tone was gentle, almost pitying. "Please sit down. You're making a scene."

"Making a scene?" The words came out louder than she intended. "Marcus, that's my research. I spent three years developing that formula. Every synthesis pathway, every molecular structure, every trial….. that was me!"

Her voice cracked on the last word. Tears burned in her eyes, but she refused to let them fall.

Not here.

Not in front of everyone.

Isabella's hand went to her throat in a gesture of shock. She turned to Marcus, her eyes wide.

"I don't understand," Isabella said softly, but the microphone picked it up. "Why is she saying this?"

"I'm saying it because it's true!" Elara took another step forward. She was in the center of the ballroom now, surrounded by tables full of colleagues and industry leaders. "I developed the Aethelgard Formula. You know I did, Marcus. Tell them. Tell them the truth!"

Marcus descended the stage steps and walked toward her with slow, measured movements. His face was arranged in an expression of concern that made her stomach turn.

"Elara," he said quietly, reaching for her arm. "Let's talk about this outside."

She jerked away from his touch.

"No. We're talking about it here. Right now. In front of everyone." She turned to address the room. Her voice shook, but she kept going. "Three years ago, I joined Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals as a research scientist. I worked under Dr. Sterling's supervision on neural regeneration projects. I developed the synthetic compound that became the Aethelgard Formula. I ran every trial. I documented every result. That formula is mine!"

Someone in the crowd whispered. Then another. The sound spread like wildfire.

Marcus's jaw tightened. He took a step closer to her.

"Elara, please," he said. The microphone was far away now, but the room was so quiet that everyone could hear him. "I know you've been under a lot of stress lately. The project was demanding. But you need to calm down before you say something you'll regret."

"Stress?" She laughed. The sound came out harsh and broken. "You think that's what this is?! Marcus, we live together. We've been together for three years. You were there for every single breakthrough. You know that formula is mine!"

His eyes went flat.

"We need to get you help," he said.

The words didn't make sense. Elara stared at him, trying to understand what he meant.

Behind her, Isabella spoke into the microphone again.

"I'm so sorry everyone has to witness this," she said, her voice trembling. "Dr. Vance has been... struggling. We've all tried to support her, but she's become increasingly fixated on this project. On taking credit for work that isn't hers."

"That's a lie!" Elara spun toward the stage. "I have proof! My research notebooks, my lab reports, my—"

"Your fabricated documents," Marcus interrupted. His voice was loud enough to carry across the ballroom. "Documents you created to support your delusions."

The room erupted.

People were talking over each other. Phones appeared in hands, cameras pointed at Elara. She saw the flash of photographs being taken.

"I'm not delusional!" Her voice was shrill now, desperate. "Marcus, please. Why are you doing this? Why are you lying?"

He looked at her with something that might have been pity. Or disgust. She couldn't tell anymore.

"Security," he called out.

Two men in black suits appeared at the edge of the ballroom. They moved toward Elara with practiced efficiency.

"No," she said, backing away. "No, you can't—I'm telling the truth! Someone listen to me! Please!"

The security guards reached her. One took her arm. She tried to pull away, but his grip was firm.

"Don't touch me!" She struggled against them. "Let go! I have every right to be here! That's my award! My research!"

They dragged her toward the exit. She fought them every step, her heels catching on the polished marble floor. Around her, colleagues she'd known for years looked away. Some held up their phones, recording.

No one helped her.

"Marcus!" she screamed as they pulled her through the double doors. "Marcus, please!"

The doors swung shut behind her.

The last thing she saw was Marcus on the stage, his arm around Isabella's shoulders, both of them watching her removal with identical expressions of relief.

Chapter 2

The security guards released Elara in the hotel corridor. Rain hammered against the tall windows at the far end of the hall. She stood there, breathing hard, her carefully styled hair coming loose from its pins.

"You need to leave the premises, ma'am," one of the guards said. His voice wasn't unkind, but it was firm.

"I need to go back in there," Elara said. "I need to explain—"

"That's not going to happen."

She looked at the closed ballroom doors. Through the wood, she could hear the murmur of resumed conversation. The gala was continuing without her.

Like she'd never been there at all.

Her hands shook as she pulled out her phone. She scrolled through her contacts until she found Dr. Helena Moss, her former mentor from graduate school. Helena would listen to her. She’d surely defend her.

The call went to voicemail.

Elara tried again.

Voicemail.

She called James Chen, a colleague from the lab.

Voicemail.

She went through her contact list, calling everyone she could think of. Research partners. Fellow scientists. People she'd published papers with.

No one answered.

The security guard cleared his throat.

"Ma'am, I really need you to leave."

Elara nodded numbly. She walked toward the elevator on unsteady legs. The emerald dress felt too tight now, constricting her ribs.

Outside, the rain had turned the street into a river of reflected neon. She neither had an umbrella nor a raincoat. She stood under the hotel awning, watching water cascade from the edge.

Her phone buzzed. A notification from the news.

She opened it with trembling fingers.

The headline read: "Pharmaceutical Gala Disrupted by Former Researcher's Outburst."

Below it was a photo of her being dragged from the ballroom. Her face was twisted in anguish, her mouth open mid-shout. She looked unhinged, exactly like someone having a breakdown.

The article loaded slowly. She read it with growing horror.

"Dr. Elara Vance, former assistant researcher at Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals, caused a disturbance at tonight's Golden Gala Awards. Vance publicly accused award recipient Dr. Isabella Cross of stealing her research, claiming credit for the revolutionary Aethelgard Formula. Dr. Marcus Sterling, Vance's former supervisor and romantic partner, expressed concern for her mental health. 'Elara has been struggling with the pressures of pharmaceutical research,' Sterling stated. 'We've all tried to support her, but she's become fixated on work that was never hers to claim. We hope she gets the help she needs.'"

Assistant researcher. Former romantic partner. The help she needs.

Every word was a carefully placed knife.

Elara scrolled down. There were more photos, and even video clips. Someone had uploaded footage of her screaming at Marcus on the ballroom floor.

The comments section was brutal.

"She looks insane."

"Classic case of someone who can't handle being second best."

"I feel bad for Dr. Cross having to deal with this."

"Sterling should have had better security."

She closed the app. Her hands were shaking so hard she nearly dropped the phone.

A taxi pulled up to the curb. She got in without thinking about where she was going.

"Where to?" the driver asked.

Elara gave him the address of the apartment she shared with Marcus. Then she remembered—had shared. That was now in the past. Everything was in the past now.

But she didn't have anywhere else to go.

The drive took fifteen minutes. When they pulled up to the building, Elara handed the driver cash and climbed out into the rain. She was soaked by the time she reached the entrance.

Her key card didn't work.

She tried it again. The light on the scanner stayed red.

Denied.

"Excuse me, miss?" The doorman approached from his desk in the lobby. "I'm going to need you to step away from the building."

"I live here," Elara said. "Apartment 4-B. With Marcus Sterling."

The doorman's expression shifted to something like pity.

"Dr. Sterling called ahead. He said you were no longer a resident. Your belongings have been moved to a storage facility." He held out a business card. "Here's the address."

Elara took the card with numb fingers. The ink was already starting to run in the rain.

"Storage," she repeated.

"Yes, ma'am. Paid through the end of the month."

Through the end of the month. Three weeks from now.

She walked away from the building in a daze. The rain had plastered her hair to her face and neck. Her dress clung to her skin. She had nowhere to go.

Her phone buzzed again. Another news alert.

She opened it.

This one was attached with a video. Someone had recorded Marcus's interview from inside the ballroom after she'd been removed.

She pressed play.

Marcus stood in his charcoal suit, his expression grave and concerned. A reporter held a microphone toward him.

"Dr. Sterling, can you comment on what happened tonight with Dr. Vance?"

Marcus sighed. He ran a hand through his hair in a gesture she recognized, the one he used when he was tired or stressed or trying to find the right words.

It was all an act.

"Elara and I were together for three years," he said. His voice was heavy with regret. "I loved her. I still care about her deeply. But over the past year, I started noticing changes. She became paranoid, jealous. She accused colleagues of undermining her work when they offered collaboration. She stayed in the lab for days at a time, refusing to eat or sleep properly."

The camera zoomed in on his face.

"When Isabella joined our team six months ago, Elara saw it as a threat. Isabella was brilliant, accomplished, and eager to contribute. But Elara became convinced that Isabella was trying to steal from her. She started making accusations. Creating false documentation. We tried to help her. We suggested she take time off, see a therapist, but she refused."

"So Dr. Vance's claims tonight were unfounded?" the reporter asked.

Marcus's jaw tightened.

"The Aethelgard Formula was a team effort," he said carefully. "Isabella led the final synthesis and trials. Elara was part of the early research phase, yes, but she contributed as a junior researcher under my supervision. She's taking credit for years of work by dozens of scientists, including herself in a role she never actually held."

"Do you believe Dr. Vance needs psychiatric help?"

"I believe she needs support," Marcus said. "I hope she finds it."

The video ended.

Elara stood in the rain, staring at her phone screen.

Junior researcher. Early research phase. Psychiatric help.

Every word designed to destroy her credibility. To make her look like exactly what they wanted everyone to see; a jealous, unstable woman who couldn't accept her own inadequacy.

She thought about the three years they'd spent together. The nights they'd stayed up talking about their future. The morning he'd told her he loved her for the first time. The way he used to look at her when she explained her research, like she was the most fascinating person in the world.

Had any of it been real?

Or had it all been part of this? A long con, years in the making, to position himself perfectly to take everything from her when the moment was right?

Her phone rang.

Dr. Helena Moss.

Elara answered immediately.

"Helena, thank god. I need to explain what happened tonight—"

"Elara." Helena's voice was strained. "I saw the news."

"It's all lies. Everything Marcus said is a lie. I have proof, I have my research notebooks, my—"

"Stop." The word was gentle but firm. "I can't help you."

Elara's breath caught.

"What?"

"I'm sorry. I truly am. But I have a career to protect. A reputation. I can't be seen supporting you right now, not with these accusations flying around. It would damage my credibility at the university."

"Helena, please. You know me. You know I wouldn't lie about this."

There was a long pause.

"I thought I knew you," Helena said quietly. "But the woman I saw on those videos tonight... I don't know who that was."

The line went dead.

Elara lowered the phone slowly. Rain ran down her face, mixing with tears she hadn't realized she was crying.

She was alone.

Completely, utterly alone.

Chapter 3

Elara spent the night on a bench in Riverside Park. She couldn't afford a hotel. Her credit cards had been declined when she tried, frozen probably, pending some kind of fraud investigation Marcus had no doubt initiated.

When dawn broke gray and cold over the city, she walked to the nearest coffee shop. She used the last of her cash to buy a small black coffee and sat in the corner booth with her phone.

The news had exploded overnight.

"Disgraced Scientist's Meltdown at Golden Gala" was trending on three different platforms. The videos had been viewed millions of times. Someone had created a hashtag: #AethelgardMeltdown.

She scrolled through the coverage with a kind of detached horror.

Then she saw it.

A new article, posted two hours ago.

"Medical Records Reveal Troubled History of Researcher Who Disrupted Gala."

A low, involuntary sound, a ragged gasp, escaped her. Her hands went numb.

She clicked the link.

The article, loaded with images of medical documents, patient records, psychiatric evaluations.

Her name was on every single one.

"Patient: Dr. Elara Vance

Diagnosis: Clinical psychosis with paranoid delusions

Treatment: Recommended inpatient psychiatric care

Physician: Dr. Raymond Cortez, MD"

The date on the evaluation was from eight months ago.

Elara stared at the screen. She'd never seen these documents before in her life, or met any Dr. Raymond Cortez and certainly never had been diagnosed with psychosis.

The documents were fake.

But they looked real. Official letterhead, stamped signatures, case numbers that probably checked out in whatever database Marcus had paid someone to insert them into.

The article continued below the images.

"Sources close to Dr. Vance report that she has been receiving treatment for mental health issues for nearly a year. Her ex-partner, Dr. Marcus Sterling, attempted to support her through this difficult period but ultimately ended their relationship when her behavior became too erratic to manage.

'I wanted to protect her privacy,' Sterling told reporters this morning. 'But given her public accusations last night, I feel I have a responsibility to share the truth. Elara is sick. She needs help, not a platform to spread these delusions.'

A wave of sudden, violent nausea hit Elara, forcing her to clutch the edge of the cheap formica table. The casual, concerned lie was more sickening than the forged documents.

There were more documents below. Security footage from Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals showing Elara in the lab late at night. The timestamp read 3:47 AM.

The caption: "Vance was frequently found in the laboratory during unauthorized hours, exhibiting erratic behavior and paranoia about her colleagues."

Another footage showed her arguing with someone in a hallway. The other person's face was blurred for privacy, but Elara recognized Isabella's red coat.

The caption: "Confrontation between Vance and Dr. Isabella Cross, six weeks prior to the Golden Gala incident."

Elara's hands shook as she scrolled.

Every piece of evidence looked real. Every document, every video, every testimony from unnamed sources.

It was a masterpiece of character assassination.

And it had clearly been planned for months.

She thought about the security footage of her in the lab at 3 AM. Marcus hadn't been supporting her career; he'd been encouraging the late nights, pushing the deadlines, and gently manufacturing a crime scene. Every "I believe in you" had been a lie designed to get a high-quality, incriminating timestamp on a security tape.

He'd been setting her up.

The footage of her arguing with Isabella in the hallway, that had been the day Isabella first arrived at Aethelgard and walked into Elara's lab uninvited to go through her notes. Elara had confronted her about it, and Marcus, standing right there, had told Elara she was overreacting, that Isabella was just eager to contribute. He'd been manufacturing evidence even then, positioning her outrage as paranoia for the camera.

The medical documents from Dr. Cortez were the final piece. Completely fabricated, but impossible to disprove without access to sealed medical records that didn't exist.

It was perfect.

Elara set her phone down on the table then subtly observed her surroundings

Around her, morning customers ordered lattes and pastries. Someone's laptop played a news program at low volume. She heard her own voice shouting from the speakers.

"That's my research! You know I did, Marcus! Tell them!"

A woman at the next table glanced at Elara, then quickly looked away.

Did she recognize her?

Elara pulled the hood of her jacket up and hunched lower in the booth.

Her phone buzzed. An email from Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals.

"Dr. Vance,

In light of recent events and the serious allegations regarding your conduct, Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals is conducting a formal investigation into your employment history and research contributions. Effective immediately, your building access has been revoked and your credentials are under review.

You are required to appear before the Ethics Committee on Friday, June 14th at 9:00 AM to address these concerns. Failure to appear will result in immediate termination and potential legal action.

Regards,

Human Resources Department

Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals"

Friday was tomorrow. Less than twenty-four hours to prepare for her professional execution.

Elara closed her email. She opened her banking app.

Account balance: $247.83

Her savings account was empty. The joint account she'd shared with Marcus showed a balance of $0.00 with a note: "Account closed by primary holder."

He'd taken everything.

She pulled up her research files from the cloud storage. Her fingers moved across the screen, navigating to the folder where she kept her lab notebooks, her synthesis protocols, her trial data.

Access denied.

She tried again.

Access denied.

Marcus had her login credentials. He'd had them since they moved in together, back when sharing passwords seemed like an intimate gesture of trust.

He'd locked her out of her own research.

Elara set the phone down carefully. If she didn't, she'd smash it against the table.

She had two hundred and forty-seven dollars. No home, no job, no access to her research, and a reputation so thoroughly destroyed that no one in the pharmaceutical industry would ever hire her again.

The door to the coffee shop opened. A woman in a business suit walked in, her phone pressed to her ear.

"Did you see that video from the gala?" she was saying. "Completely unhinged. I feel bad for Marcus Sterling. Three years with someone that unstable must have been exhausting."

Elara stood up. She left her half-finished coffee on the table and walked out into the gray morning.

She had nowhere to go, but she knew exactly what to do. Marcus Sterling wanted her gone. He wanted her silent. That, she realized, was the one thing he would never get.

Betrayed, I Become The CEO'S Contracted Bride

Chapter 1
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