Her Husband Gave Her Company to His Mistress,So She Sent Him to PrisonChapter 1

At our thirtieth wedding anniversary gala, my husband—Duke Stephens, CEO of EmpireStar Group—announced he would transfer all his shares to Stacy Jenner. The girl I'd sponsored through school.

It took a thorough investigation to uncover the truth: they'd been sleeping together since her second year under my patronage.

Stacy had already given him a daughter. The child she carried now was a son.

The rumors had spread like wildfire—some so-called master had pronounced the unborn baby a "child of fortune," destined to bring prosperity.

I grabbed Duke by the collar, shaking with rage.

"What do these thirty years mean to you? What do I mean to you?"

"You're Mrs. Stephens."

His voice was flat, clinical.

"You got the title. You got me. Don't be greedy enough to think my entire heart should belong to you alone."

Duke looked at me without a trace of love.

"If you can't accept them—mother and son—I'll move out. I'll stay at the other place on odd days. Come back to you on the rest."

I watched his retreating figure, and thirty years of marriage collapsed into something unrecognizable.

Calmly, I opened my drawer and tore up the anniversary gift I'd spent months preparing.

——

The gala glittered beneath cascading crystal chandeliers. Duke raised his champagne flute, his smile warm and practiced as he addressed the room.

"I have an announcement."

My hand trembled around my glass. My heart stuttered.

I had orchestrated every detail of this evening—the venue, the flowers, the guest list. Thirty years of devotion woven into a single night.

Thirty years of building him from nothing into the man who now stood bathed in spotlight, commanding the city's elite.

I thought he would finally say what I'd waited three decades to hear.

Thank you.

"All shares under my name—including my core stake in EmpireStar Group—will be transferred to the woman I love. Stacy Jenner."

The room erupted.

My glass slipped. Crystal shattered against marble. Crimson wine splashed across my silver gown like a wound torn open.

Stacy Jenner.

The impoverished student I'd funded for ten years. The timid girl who once called me "Miss Sullivan" with such reverence. The young woman I'd taught to navigate high society, whose loneliness I'd soothed through countless nights.