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The Jilted Bride's Billionaire Savior

The Jilted Bride's Billionaire Savior

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Everyone knew Frances had loved Evan for years. Obedient and docile, she'd endured a dependent life for his sake. When the public accused her of framing someone, Evan watched coldly, even ordering her to kneel down in public for his childhood sweetheart. Utterly humiliated, she lost all hope in him. After breaking off their engagement, she eloped and married a trillionaire heir overnight. That very night, their marriage certificate shot straight to the top of trending searches. The arrogant Evan finally panicked and snapped harshly, "Don't get your hopes up. Do you really think she loves you? She's only using your family's power to get revenge on me." Alexander kissed the woman in his arms and replied lazily, "So what? I happen to have all the wealth and influence she needs."

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The Jilted Bride's Billionaire Savior Chapter 1

The buzz of the phone on her nightstand was a physical violation, dragging Frances Benjamin from a shallow, restless sleep. Her body ached, a high fever burning through her veins and leaving her drenched in cold sweat.

She fumbled for it, her eyes struggling to focus on the screen. A news alert. The headline swam in the dim light, sharp and cruel. "Sterling Heir's Late-Night Tryst-Is the Wedding Off?"

Beneath it, a grainy photo. Her fiancé, Evan Sterling, his profile unmistakable, was leaning into a car, his hand on the arm of a woman whose face was lost in shadow. Yet, Frances's feverish eyes caught a tiny detail-the woman's dress had slipped down, revealing a faint, blurry tattoo on her waist. A tattoo that looked sickeningly familiar.

A cold, familiar numbness washed over her, quickly replaced by a bitter wave of sarcasm. There was no shock, no surge of pain. Just a profound weariness that settled deep in her bones. This wasn't the first time. It was just the first time it had made headlines a month before their wedding.

Her phone buzzed again. A text from Evan.

"My study. Now. And don't let the press see you."

No apology. No explanation. Just a command.

Frances slid out of bed, her legs trembling from the fever. The silk of her nightgown felt like a shroud against her clammy skin. She pulled on a simple cashmere robe, her movements mechanical. She had to end this. This charade, this slow-motion train wreck of a life. Today.

She walked through the silent, cavernous halls of the Sterling estate. The air was thick with the scent of old money and fresh decay. As she neared the study, she heard voices from inside, the door slightly ajar.

Jenna Price's voice. Her stepsister. High-pitched, cloying, and laced with venom.

"Evan, you have to make her do it! You have to make that idiot Frances take the fall. Just say she's being dramatic, that we were just having a moment. You know, like family."

The blood in Frances's veins turned to ice. A cold dread, sharp and absolute, seized her. The woman in the car. The tattoo on the waist. It was Jenna.

Evan's voice was a low murmur, meant to soothe. "Don't worry, baby. Her grandmother's life is in my hands. She'll do whatever I say."

The words hit Frances with the force of a physical blow. Her breath hitched. Her stomach twisted into a tight, painful knot. She felt the world tilt on its axis, the last vestiges of her denial shattering into a million pieces.

She pushed the heavy oak door open.

The scene inside burned itself into her memory. Jenna was perched on Evan's lap, his desk chair turned away from the door. Her dress was hiked up her thighs, his tie was loosened, and his hand was resting possessively on her hip, right next to the initials tattooed on her skin.

They looked up, their faces a fleeting mask of panic before settling into a defiant arrogance. They weren't sorry. They were just annoyed they'd been caught.

Evan gently pushed Jenna off his lap and stood, smoothing his tie with a practiced motion. He looked at Frances not as his fiancée, but as an inconvenient problem to be managed.

He picked up a sheet of paper from his desk and tossed it at her. It fluttered to the floor at her feet.

"Read this," he said, his voice flat and cold. "At the press conference. Or I pull the plug on your grandmother's treatment. Today."

Frances stared at the paper, then back at his face. The man she had once, long ago, thought she might love was a stranger. A monster. She felt a profound, chilling coldness seep into her heart.

Jenna sashayed over to her, her smile dripping with poison. She leaned in, whispering so only Frances could hear. "You'd better be a good girl, sis."

The image of her grandmother, frail and tethered to machines in a sterile hospital room, flashed in Frances's mind. The thought of her gasping for breath, of the monitors going silent... it was a vise around her heart.

Her hands, clenched into fists at her sides, slowly uncurled. The fight drained out of her, replaced by a chilling, hollow calm.

She bent down and picked up the statement. The words on the page were a grotesque parody of the truth, a script for her own public humiliation.

"I'll do it," she said, her voice a dead thing.

The lawn outside the Sterling mansion had been transformed into a media circus. The flashes of the cameras were like a barrage of tiny explosions, blinding and relentless.

Frances walked toward the podium like a prisoner to the gallows. Evan was beside her, his arm wrapped around her waist in a mockery of support. His touch made her skin crawl.

She could feel Jenna's triumphant gaze on her from somewhere in the crowd. A victor watching the spoils of war.

Frances glanced at the man beside her. Evan was wearing a pristine, bespoke suit. Her heart churned with a complex, bitter cocktail of emotions. She recognized every stitch of that fabric; she had stayed up all night sewing it for him with her own hands two years ago. Now, he was wearing her devotion like an armor while he threw her to the wolves.

The reporters shouted questions, their words a chaotic storm of accusation.

"Miss Benjamin, were you aware of your fiancé's infidelity?"

"Is the wedding cancelled?"

"How does it feel to be cheated on so publicly?"

Frances took a deep breath, the air tasting of metal. She forced her lips into a smile, a perfect, empty curve. She felt like a doll, her strings being pulled by the man beside her.

She unfolded the paper. Every letter was a brand on her soul.

Her voice, when she spoke, was steady. Frighteningly so. She read the lies, one by one, each word a betrayal of herself. She explained that the woman in the photo was a "close family member," that the entire incident was a "terrible misunderstanding."

She declared her love for Evan "unwavering" and their wedding plans "unchanged."

As the word "unwavering" left her lips, she pressed her thumbnail into her index finger, hard. The small, sharp pain was the only thing that felt real.

Evan squeezed her hand, holding it up for the cameras to see, a pantomime of unity. He was smiling, basking in his victory.

Frances felt the eyes of the world on her, dissecting her, pitying her, mocking her. She was a clown in a very expensive circus, performing the greatest joke of her life.

Finally, it was over. The reporters began to disperse, their hunger for scandal momentarily sated.

The second the last major camera was lowered, Evan's smile vanished. He dropped her hand as if it were contaminated.

He didn't even look at her.

He turned and walked directly toward the spot where he knew Jenna was waiting, leaving Frances alone on the podium, a solitary figure in the harsh morning light.

The early summer breeze felt like a razor against her skin.

Her dignity, her love, her hope-all of it lay shattered on the manicured lawn of the Sterling estate. And she had been the one forced to grind it into dust with her own heel.

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