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Jilted Heiress: Her Billion-Dollar Payback Novel Cover

Jilted Heiress: Her Billion-Dollar Payback

Jaeda’s wedding was a business deal meant to save Drew’s family firm, but he jilted her at the altar for his intern, Cassidy. To smear Jaeda’s name, Drew faked a suicide attempt and demanded her mother’s necklace and company shares. During a board meeting meant to oust her, Drew called to gloat about his victory. However, Jaeda turned the tables by putting him on speaker as federal agents arrived, revealing she controlled the entire board.
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Chapter 1

My fiancé, Drew, had a crippling germ phobia. Our wedding was a merger in disguise-a deal where my fortune would save his family's failing company.

But at the altar, in front of the world, he left me for his intern. He declared he was choosing "love over money," painting me as the cold-hearted villain who tried to buy a husband.

He wasn't done. He staged a suicide attempt from my office building, live-streaming to the world how my "cruelty" had pushed him to the edge.

Then, he and his new love came to my office with their final demand: twenty percent of my company and my late mother's priceless necklace.

"Cassidy is quite fond of it," he sneered.

The next day, during the emergency board meeting called to fire me, he called, gloating.

"It's checkmate, Jaeda. Just accept that you've lost."

I put him on speakerphone for the entire board to hear. "Actually, Drew," I said, as federal agents walked into the room, "I own the entire board."

Chapter 1

Jaeda Reynolds POV:

The moment I saw my fiancé, a man with a crippling, almost pathological fear of germs, drink from his young intern' s glass, I knew my wedding was a funeral. It just hadn't been announced yet.

The air in the dimly lit Las Vegas bar was thick with the smell of stale beer, cheap perfume, and desperation. It was the kind of place Drew Coleman, my fiancé, would normally refuse to enter without a hazmat suit. He claimed to have severe mysophobia, a condition that made him flinch if I touched his hand without first using sanitizer. He carried a small, expensive bottle of it everywhere, a silver flask of sterile salvation.

Yet here he was, at his own bachelor party, surrounded by his jeering, half-drunk friends. And he was laughing. A deep, genuine laugh I hadn't heard in months.

The laugh was directed at a girl barely old enough to be in this bar. Cassidy Madden. His intern. She was all wide, innocent blue eyes and a cascade of blonde hair that seemed to catch the cheap neon lights and turn them into a halo. She said something, leaning close, her hand resting on his arm in a way that was too familiar, too comfortable.

Drew threw his head back, laughing again, and then he did it. He reached out, took the half-empty glass of what looked like a vodka soda from her hand, and took a long, deliberate swallow.

The music in the bar seemed to fade to a dull throb in my ears. The world narrowed to that single point of contact: his lips on the rim of her glass. A glass she had just been drinking from. A glass that was, by his own rigid standards, a petri dish of contamination.

My heart didn't break. It froze. It turned into a solid block of ice in my chest. This wasn' t a careless mistake. This was a statement. This was a betrayal so blatant, so contemptuous, it was its own kind of confession.

His friends, the same ones who tiptoed around his phobia and joked about his "quirks," didn't even blink. They just saw their friend having a good time with a pretty girl. They saw what they wanted to see. They didn't see the COO of Coleman Industries, a man whose family business was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, a business I, Jaeda Reynolds, CEO of Reynolds Capital, was about to save with a merger disguised as a marriage.

I remained in the shadows at the edge of the room, my presence unannounced. I had flown to Vegas to surprise him, a romantic gesture. The irony was so thick it was suffocating.

I let the scene play out for another minute. He didn't just drink from her glass. He set it down, and his fingers brushed against hers. He leaned in again, his lips close to her ear, and whatever he whispered made her blush and giggle, a sickeningly sweet sound that cut through the noise.

Enough.

I walked out of the shadows and towards their booth. The path cleared for me, not because they knew who I was, but because of the aura I projected. In Silicon Valley, they called it my "boardroom presence." It was cold, commanding, and absolute.

Drew saw me first. The laughter died on his lips. His face went pale, the color of old paper. "Jaeda," he stammered, scrambling to his feet, nearly knocking over a table. "What are you doing here?"

Cassidy looked up at me, her blue eyes wide with a perfectly feigned confusion. The innocent lamb.

"I came to see my fiancé," I said, my voice dangerously calm. I didn't look at Cassidy. She was a symptom, not the disease. My eyes were locked on Drew. "But it seems he's been cured of his... affliction."

The air grew tense. His friends shuffled awkwardly.

"Jaeda, it's not what it looks like," he started, the classic, pathetic refrain of a guilty man.

"Isn't it?" I asked, my voice dropping lower. "You, Drew Coleman, who once had a panic attack because a waiter handed you a menu with a thumbprint on it, just drank from your intern's glass."

He flinched, as if I had struck him. "It was a joke. The guys... they dared me."

"And you're a performing seal now?" I gestured towards Cassidy. "Her. Or me. Decide, Drew. Right now."

The demand hung in the air, heavy and sharp. He looked from my face, cold as granite, to Cassidy's, which was now trembling with manufactured tears. He was a weak man, and weak men are drawn to the performance of vulnerability.

"Jaeda, please, not here," he pleaded, his voice a whisper. "Let's talk about this later."

"There is no later," I said. "Her or me."

He hesitated for a fraction of a second too long. In that moment, I saw it all: his desperation to save his family's company, his resentment of my power, his desire to have the benefits of my fortune without the burden of my control. He wanted the merger, but he wanted his ego stroked by a girl who looked at him like he was a god, not a project to be salvaged.

He didn't make a choice. He just stood there, paralyzed.

So I made it for him.

"Fine," I said, my voice crisp. I turned and walked away without a backward glance. I heard him call my name, a desperate, strangled sound, but I didn't stop.

I flew back to San Francisco that night. For two days, there was silence. No calls, no texts. Utter radio silence. I knew he was calculating, weighing his options. The failing Coleman Industries against his little affair. It was a simple math problem.

On the morning of our wedding, he finally called. His voice was thick with what I was supposed to believe was remorse. "Jaeda, I am so sorry. I was a fool. It's you. It's always been you. I'll be at the altar. I love you."

I almost believed him. Hope is a stubborn, stupid thing.

I walked down the aisle of the grand cathedral, the organ music swelling, the pews filled with the most powerful people in tech and finance. It was the merger of the year. I saw him standing there, handsome in his tailored tuxedo, his face a mask of solemn devotion.

I reached the altar. The priest began to speak. "We are gathered here today..."

Drew held up a hand, stopping him. A nervous ripple went through the crowd.

He turned to me. His eyes were not filled with love. They were filled with a cold, triumphant cruelty.

"Jaeda," he said, his voice amplified by the microphone, echoing through the cavernous space. "I can't do this."

Gasps erupted. My father started to move from the front pew, his face thunderous.

"I thought I could," Drew continued, his voice rising, playing to the audience. "I thought I could marry for money, for business. But my heart won't let me. I'm in love with someone else. Someone who sees me for who I am, not for what I can provide."

He looked past me, towards the back of the church. The great wooden doors swung open.

And there stood Cassidy Madden, dressed in a simple white dress, tears streaming down her face like a martyred saint.

"I love Cassidy," Drew declared, his voice ringing with false righteousness. "And I'm choosing love over money."

He dropped my hand, turned his back on me at the altar, and walked down the aisle towards her. As he passed the pews, he was no longer a weak man betraying his fiancée; he was a romantic hero, a man brave enough to defy a corporate queen for true love.

The humiliation was a physical force, a wave of heat that washed over me. The whispers, the stares, the pitying looks-they were like a thousand tiny needles against my skin.

Within the hour, it was everywhere. #LoveOverMoney was trending. A picture of Drew and Cassidy, kissing passionately outside the church, was the lead story on every gossip site. The caption, posted from Drew's own account, read: "Follow your heart. It's the only deal that matters. I'm free. With my true love, @CassidyMadden."

She posted a picture of them holding hands, her simple dress contrasting with the opulent, empty cathedral in the background. "Sometimes the richest man is the one with nothing but love," she wrote.

They were painting me as the villain. The cold, controlling businesswoman who tried to buy a husband.

I stood alone in my penthouse, the lavish wedding reception food untouched, the string quartet silent. My phone buzzed incessantly. I looked at the screen. It was a news alert.

Coleman Industries stock, which had risen in anticipation of the merger, had begun to plummet. It was down 15%.

A cold, clear thought cut through the fog of my humiliation.

You want to play this game? You want to make this public?

Fine.

I picked up my phone and made a call not to my publicist, but to my head trader.

"Liam," I said, my voice devoid of all emotion. "It's Jaeda."

"Jaeda, I am so, so sorry. I saw the news. Are you okay?"

"I'm excellent," I said. "I have a new directive. Liquidate our entire position in every company associated with Coleman Industries' supply chain. Every single one. Then, I want you to start shorting their stock. Use the full weight of Reynolds Capital. I want to see them bankrupt by Monday."

There was a stunned silence on the other end of the line.

"Jaeda... that's... that's a declaration of war."

"No, Liam," I replied, looking out at the city lights, my reflection a cold silhouette in the glass. "It's an execution."

I hung up the phone. The shock was gone. The hurt was gone. All that remained was a chilling, crystalline resolve. Drew Coleman had tried to humiliate me, to turn me into a victim. He had miscalculated. I was not a victim.

I was a CEO. And he had just become my most hostile takeover target.

I scrolled through my social media feed again, my fingers moving with detached precision. I saw a comment from a mutual friend, a tech billionaire, under Drew's post: "Wow, man. Bold move. Respect."

Another one from a socialite I'd had lunch with last week: "So happy for you both! True love always wins! "

The world was celebrating my abuser. They were applauding my public execution.

My eyes landed on the custom-made sapphire engagement ring still on my finger. It was the color of the deep ocean, a flawless, 20-carat stone from Sri Lanka. Drew had made a grand show of presenting it to me, kneeling in a field of lavender in Provence. "A stone as rare and powerful as you are," he had said, his voice thick with practiced sincerity.

Now, the stone just felt cold. A heavy, meaningless piece of carbon. He hadn't bought it. I had. The funds were quietly transferred from one of my private accounts to his, a "pre-merger bonus" to allow him the charade of providing for me.

My assistant, Zara, knocked softly and entered the room. Her face was pale with concern. "Jaeda, the markets are reacting. Coleman Industries is down twenty-two percent in after-hours trading. It's a bloodbath."

"It's not enough," I said, my voice flat. "I want it to be a massacre."

"The board... the optics..." she began, wringing her hands.

"The optics are that my fiancé publicly abandoned me for his intern. My public response will be to acquire his company's assets for pennies on the dollar at a bankruptcy auction," I stated, turning to face her. "Do not have our PR team release any statements. No 'wishing them well.' No 'asking for privacy.' We will be silent."

"But they're controlling the narrative!" she protested. "They're painting you as a monster."

A slow, cold smile spread across my lips. It felt alien on my face. "Good," I said. "Let them. A monster is exactly what they need to be afraid of."

My phone buzzed again. It was a text from Drew.

"Did you have to do this, Jaeda? Can't you just let me be happy? It's cruel."

I stared at the message, the sheer audacity of it taking my breath away for a second. He humiliates me on a global stage, and I'm the cruel one for protecting my assets?

My fingers flew across the screen, my reply short and brutal.

"This isn't about your happiness. This is about your consequences."

I blocked his number. Then I blocked Cassidy's. Then I blocked his father's.

The war had begun. And I had no intention of taking prisoners.

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