The Bruised Wife Thought Her Husband Owned Wall Street, Until The CEO She Left Ten Years Ago Burned His Entire Empire To The Ground Just To Steal Her Back

Part One: The Woman Who Disappeared

The bathroom floor was cold.

Scarlett pressed her cheek against the white marble tiles and counted the cracks near the baseboard. Seven. There were seven of them. She had memorized them over the last three years.

Blood dripped from her split lip into the sink drain.

Her husband’s footsteps faded down the hallway. Heavy. Certain. He never ran. Why would he? The great Richard Sullivan owned half of Manhattan’s commercial real estate. His name sat on buildings. His face smiled from magazines.

No one would believe a broken woman over him.

Scarlett waited until the front door slammed. Then she counted to five hundred. Then she stood up slowly, holding her ribs, and opened the medicine cabinet.

The concealer was almost empty.

She dabbed it over the bruise blooming across her cheekbone. Then she straightened her blouse—silk, expensive, a gift from Richard after the last time he had apologized—and walked to her home office.

Her laptop glowed to life.

Scarlett Hayes, Senior Portfolio Manager. That was the name on her business cards. The name Richard had tried to erase when he married her. But she had kept her maiden name. Kept her career. Kept one small piece of herself locked away where his fists couldn’t reach.

Her inbox showed forty-seven unread emails.

She ignored them all.

Instead, she opened a search window and typed three letters: A.M.

Alexander Morgan.

The CEO of Morgan-Stone Securities. The largest independent brokerage firm in the United States. A man whose face appeared on every financial news network. Whose name was spoken with reverence and fear in equal measure.

Her fingers hovered over the keyboard.

She hadn’t typed his name in ten years. Hadn’t spoken it. Hadn’t allowed herself to think it past midnight, when Richard was asleep and she could press her palms against her eyes and pretend.

The search results loaded.

There he was.

Dark hair, silver at the temples now. The same sharp jaw. The same cold eyes that had once softened only for her. He stood on the cover of Forbes, arms crossed, wearing a suit that cost more than most people’s cars.

The headline read: “The Ice King of Wall Street—How Alexander Morgan Built an Empire on Other Men’s Ruins.”

Scarlett closed the laptop.

Her hands were shaking.

She looked down at her wrist. The bruise there was fresh. Richard had grabbed her last night when she asked about the missing money from their joint account. His fingers had left marks shaped like crescent moons.

The marriage contract was ironclad.

Her prenup was a cage she had signed willingly, too young, too in love with the idea of security to read the fine print. Richard could take everything. Her savings. Her investments. Her reputation.

But he couldn’t take her skills.

She opened the laptop again.

This time, she drafted an email. No names. No details. Just a request for a confidential meeting with the risk assessment team at Morgan-Stone. A whisper about irregularities in Sullivan Properties’ books.

She hit send before she could stop herself.

Then she deleted the sent message from her outbox.

Then she went upstairs, washed the concealer from her face, and stared at the woman in the mirror. Thirty-four years old. Once the youngest vice president at Goldman Sachs. Once the woman who had walked away from Alexander Morgan because he had refused to leave his empire for her.

She had chosen Richard instead.

Richard, who had promised her safety. Richard, who had promised her a life without fear.

Richard, who had broken her ribs twice and her heart so many times she had lost count.

The doorbell rang.

Scarlett froze.

Richard wasn’t due back for hours. The housekeeper came on Tuesdays. Today was Wednesday.

She walked downstairs slowly, each step sending pain through her side. The front door had a peephole. She pressed her eye against it.

A man in a black suit stood on her doorstep.

Not Richard. Not anyone she recognized.

She opened the door a crack.

The man smiled politely. “Mrs. Sullivan?”

“Hayes,” she corrected automatically. “It’s Ms. Hayes.”

“Of course.” He handed her a business card. Black. Gold lettering. Only a name and a phone number. “Mr. Morgan would like to invite you to dinner. Tonight. Eight o’clock.”

Scarlett’s blood turned to ice.

“He understands if you’re busy,” the man continued. “He also understands that you emailed his personal risk team forty-seven minutes ago.”

She said nothing.

“He thought you might want to discuss your… situation. Away from your husband’s cameras.”

Scarlett looked up. Toward the street. Toward the lamppost with the small black dome she had never noticed before.

“He’s been watching the house for three weeks,” the man said quietly. “Ever since he heard about the hospital visit.”

Her hand went to her ribs. The fracture from March. She had told the ER doctor she fell down the stairs.

“Eight o’clock,” the man repeated. “A car will arrive.”

He turned and walked away.

Scarlett closed the door. Leaned against it. Pressed her forehead to the cool wood.

Alexander Morgan knew.

After ten years of silence, after she had chosen another man, after she had disappeared herself from his life completely—he had found her.

And he was not asking.

He was telling.

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Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.

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