Pregnant And Leaving The Fake Amnesiac Billionaire


On the day Evelyn Reed was to solidify her future with tech titan Julian Croft, he was lost at sea. Declared a widow before she could become a wife, Evelyn’s world crumbles. Then, the impossible happens: Julian is found alive. But he returns a stranger, claiming amnesia, with a new woman by his side. When Evelyn uncovers the devastating truth behind Julian’s disappearance, a calculated betrayal orchestrated for a merger, her grief turns to ice-cold vengeance. Forced to fake her own death and disappear, Evelyn must outwit Julian and his ruthless new partner to protect her unborn child and reclaim her life. But in a world of high-stakes deals and cutthroat ambition, the lines between love, betrayal, and revenge blur, leaving Evelyn to question who she can trust and how far she’ll go to protect everything she holds dear. Can she dismantle the empire Julian built on her heart, or will she become another casualty in his relentless pursuit of power?

On the day I was supposed to sign the final deed to our life together… My fiancé, Julian Croft, the titan of the tech world, was lost at sea.

He was sailing back from a clandestine meeting on a private island. He said he was closing the deal of a lifetime—one that would secure our empire for generations.

He'd called me from the yacht, the wind whipping through the phone. He said he couldn't wait to come home and feel our baby kick.

Then, the storm hit without warning.

They said the yacht was torn apart by the waves. They said the wreckage was scattered for miles.

All they gave me was a splintered piece of the boat's helm and a waterlogged satellite phone. That was all that was left of him.

I was made a widow before I could ever be a wife.

And the child growing inside me, our son, became the heir to a ghost, a legacy without a leader.

After that, something inside me fractured.

I went numb. The world turned grey. I ate because the doctor told me to. I slept because the pills forced me to. My own heartbeat felt like a stranger's.

People said I had to be strong for the baby. But how do you build a future when the man of your life was swallowed by the ocean before he could even meet his own son?

Two weeks later, during the memorial service I arranged on our cliffside property, Julian Croft was found.

Alive.

He was rescued by a fishing trawler, clinging to a life raft.

But he wasn't the same.

The doctors called it dissociative amnesia. A total memory wipe.

He remembered his name, his skills, his company… but not me. Not us.

He returned with his "business partner," Isabelle Vance, by his side.

She was the one who'd identified him, the one who'd stayed with him in the hospital.

She held his arm, her expression as fake as anything could be, as Julian looked at me like I was a stranger.

He looked just like Julian, the same piercing blue eyes, the same smile. It was physically agonizing for me to see him look through me.

I told myself the trauma was playing tricks on my mind.

Until… I overheard them talking outside his home office, the one I had especially designed for him.

Isabelle's voice was low as she spoke.

"You really think you can keep this up? Faking amnesia? You left her standing on that cliff, pregnant and alone, for a merger? For God's sake, Julian. You staged a shipwreck just to close the deal with my father."

I stopped breathing. The glass in my hand felt impossibly heavy.

"Isabelle, he would have never approved the merger if he knew I was still attached to Evelyn," Julian's voice was cold, pragmatic.

"He needed to believe my loyalties were singular. To you. The marriage is a business contract. Six months. That's all I need."

"Once the Croft-Vance merger is finalized and the stock stabilizes… my memory will 'return.' But there won't be an Evelyn in it anymore. It will be you, Isabelle."

Evelyn's hand went to her mouth, stopping her gasp. Every single moment they had together, it was all a lie.

"Evelyn will understand, She's head over heels for me." Julian chuckled as he kisses Isabelle. " Then we'll annul our marriage, and enjoy our lives. We'll be a family."

My knees gave out. I stumbled back, catching myself on the wall, the sound of my own ragged breath roaring in my ears.

He was a liar.

The man I wept for. The man whose child I carried. He'd used me, for a merger. For Isabelle.

My hands trembled as I pulled out my phone.

I texted the only person left in my world who understood how to burn things to the ground and walk away clean, my former mentor, Klaus. He operated in the underworld, had connections to multiple mafia overlords.

"Klaus. I need a new life. I want to stage a death. I want to give Julian exactly what he gave me." I texted.

"But not yet. Give me one week. I need him to believe I'm broken. I need him to feel secure in his lie."

My entire body was shaking, something I couldn't control.

And still, their voices carried from the office.

"She's a wreck, Julian," Isabelle said, a note of satisfaction in her tone. "If it weren't for that baby, she would've already jumped from that cliff. You gutted her."

"Evelyn is resilient. She loves me enough to forgive me," he replied, his arrogance was like a physical blow. "I'll make it up to her. I have a lifetime to do it."

A lifetime? No. He wouldn't.

I dragged myself back to the guest room they had put me in, my own home was now foreign to me. I collapsed onto the cold bed, my heart aching.

My phone buzzed.

Klaus.

I answered, my throat too tight to speak. "Evelyn?" His voice was sharp, cutting through the fog. "What's happening? I thought Julian was dead."

I wanted to scream, to shatter something. Instead, I whispered back to him, "He's alive. He faked the amnesia. For her. For a merger. They're going to marry. And now he's watching me mourn him every single day."

The line was silent for a long moment. Then, when Klaus spoke again, his voice was all business.

"Alright. One week. I'll arrange everything. No trace. No loose ends."

He didn't need to ask why. He already knew the answer.

I lay there, staring at the ceiling, Julian's condescending words echoing in my head.

Then came the knock.

Soft. Hesitant. The knock of a man pretending not to know me.

I opened the door, and there he was.

The man I mourned. The man who had erased me from his life. He was holding a cup of herbal tea.

As if he hadn't just carved out my heart and called it a business decision.

He offered a small, sympathetic smile.

"Hey… the housekeeper said you weren't feeling well."

"Thinking about him again? You miss the man I used to be?"

"Can I ask you something?" I cut him off, not caring what he had to say.

Julian, taken aback, said, "Yeah… sure, go on."

"Are you faking all of this Julian?


Chapter 2

Julian froze for a fraction of a second.

A flicker of something crossed his face before it was smoothed over by that practiced mask of concern. He let out a soft, pitying sigh.

He stepped forward and rested a hand on my shoulder.

“You’re exhausted, Evelyn,” he said, his voice calm, therapeutic. “How could I fake this? The doctors said those memories might never come back. You’ve been under so much stress.”

He tilted his head, his words landing like carefully placed stones, walling me in.

“That little one you’re carrying… he’s the future of the Croft legacy. The only piece of the old me that survived. I’ll do whatever it takes to protect him. That’s a promise.”

I didn’t answer.

I couldn’t look at that face anymore, that lie wearing the features I once adored.

“You should go,” I said, my voice barely a whisper. “I’m tired. I just want to rest.”

That’s when I heard her voice from across the hall.

“Julian?”

The door to the master suite opened, and there she stood.

Isabelle. Wrapped in my cashmere throw. The deep charcoal one I’d bought, the one Julian used to pull over us on cold nights while we watched the city lights from our bed.

She wasn’t even trying to be subtle.

“I can’t sleep,” she murmured, her voice was delicate. “My head is pounding. Can you come back? I need you to go over the quarterly projections with me… hearing your voice always calms me down.”

The air in the hallway turned sharp and cold.

Julian was caught between us. His pregnant, grieving fiancée and his other, business "partner" he was actually going to marry.

He gave me one last, unreadable look.

“Get some rest,” he told me softly, before turning to Isabelle and moving toward her without hesitation. He draped an arm around her, pulling the cashmere tighter around her shoulders.

She melted into his side as if she were born to be there. As if I were the intruder in my own home. They disappeared into the bedroom, and I stood there, staring at the closed door long after they were gone.

Not because I was in shock.

But because I was finally seeing things clearly.

I met Julian Croft three years ago. I was the lead architect on his new corporate headquarters. It was a gleaming skyscraper meant to scrape the sky.

I wasn’t supposed to catch the client’s eye. I wasn’t supposed to be anything more than a name on a blueprint.

But I did.

The moment his gaze met mine across a boardroom table, I knew my carefully structured world was about to be demolished.

He didn’t ask for my portfolio.

He asked what I dreamed of building.

And when I told him, he smiled like I’d just handed him the blueprint to the future.

He pursued me with the same relentless, strategic energy he used to build his empire.

Brilliant. Ambitious. All-consuming.

And I let him in. God help me, but I gave him the keys to everything.

A year later, he proposed on the unfinished top floor of that very skyscraper while the city glittered below us.

No audience. No fanfare. Just him.

He pulled out a ring, a sapphire gem set in platinum he’d designed himself.

“Evelyn,” he said, his voice low and fervent, “if this world is just code, I want you to be my anchor. My reality.”

And I said yes.

He once told me, hand on my stomach, “This baby came at the perfect time. He’s our proof. Our foundation. I’ve never been this certain of anything, my love.”

And now?

Now that same man faked amnesia and is planning on marrying another woman, leaving me in the ruins of the life he promised.

All for a merger and that woman.

I don’t even know when I truly lost him.

The next morning, a sharp knock came at my door.

“Evelyn,” his voice called out, efficient and detached. “Time for your appointment. Are you ready?”

I was still tying the laces on my sneakers, my hands shaking slightly, when I heard footsteps stop outside my door.

Then—

“Julian…” Her voice.

Isabelle.

Urgent. Sharp. I froze, listening as she met him in the hall.

“My father just called from Tokyo,” she said, her voice laced with fake panic. “The board is having second thoughts about the final vote. There’s a faction pushing back. We need to get on a conference call right now.”

There was a pause, a beat of calculated silence.

“Damn it,” Julian, my Julian, swore under his breath. “Fine. Get the lawyers on the line. I’ll be in the office in two minutes.”

His attention snapped away from me instantly, pulled by the gravity of the deal he’d sold his soul for.

From the crack in my door, I saw him run a hand through his hair, all thoughts of me or our baby had evaporated.

His focus was entirely on her and on the problem she presented.

He didn’t even knock again.

I stepped out into the hallway just as he was turning away. He glanced up, his expression momentarily startled before it hardened back into the CEO.

“Sorry, Evelyn,” he said, his tone all business. “Something’s come up with the merger. I can’t leave the house this morning.”

He pulled out his phone, already dialing. “You’ll still go to your appointment. I’m sending my driver and a security detail with you. The car is waiting out front, and the doctor is expecting you.”

Behind him, Isabelle leaned against the doorframe, not even bothering to hide the triumphant smirk on her lips.

She looked at me victoriously. My hand went to my stomach, my chest felt tight, but the tears that came to my eyes were hot with anger, not sorrow.

I sat alone on a bench in a private waiting room of the hospital’s Croft Wing, my fingers trembled as I stared at the black-and-white ultrasound photo.

There it was… a tiny, perfect flicker of a life.

“A strong, healthy heartbeat,” the doctor had said, smiling, pointing to the image.

My son.

I scrubbed at my eyes angrily, as if I could wipe away the last of my weakness. I couldn’t do this here. Not in this place.

Not under his name.

This was his territory. Cameras in every hallway. Staff who owed their loyalty to his corporation. Anything that happened here would get back to him.

I took out my phone and made a call to the driver waiting downstairs.

“I’m feeling a bit overwhelmed,” I lied, my voice steady. “I think I’ll just sit in the hospital’s garden for a little while. Alone. You go grab some coffee. I’ll call you when I’m ready.”

The head of security hesitated, but my tone left no room for argument. They were trained to follow the orders of the woman carrying the Croft heir.

The moment I saw the black town car pull away from the entrance, I walked calmly out of the garden through a side gate, slipped into the anonymous city bustle, and hailed a taxi.

Destination? A small, independent clinic across town.

A place with no corporate ties. A place where a woman could disappear if she needed to.


Chapter 3

Just before they prepped me for the procedure, my phone lit up. A new message. A video file sent from an unknown number, but I knew who it was from.

Isabelle.

I should have deleted it. I should have thrown the phone against the wall. But I didn’t.

With a hand that felt disconnected from my body, I opened it. The screen showed them—Julian and Isabelle, in his home office.

He was in his chair, and she was perched on the edge of his desk, laughing as he traced the spine of a leather-bound document. It was the prospectus for the Croft-Vance merger. Then he leaned in and kissed her.

Not a passionate, desperate kiss. It was worse. It was familiar, easy. The kind of kiss shared between partners who have already won.

But what shattered the last piece of my resolve wasn’t the kiss. It was what he did next. As he leaned back, he tapped his forefinger twice against his temple—a small, unconscious habit he had whenever he’d outsmarted an opponent and closed a deal. The old Julian. The real Julian.

I smiled, a bitter, empty curve of my lips. That was it. The final signature on a contract I never knew I’d signed. And still, one last, pathetic piece of me needed to hear it from him.

One last chance.

I did something weak. Something human.

I called him.

If he answered…

If he heard the tremor in my voice and chose me…

If he walked out of that office and came to me right now—I swore I would erase it all. The lies, the merger, the woman, the pain. I would tear up the blueprints of my revenge and build our future from the rubble, for our son. For the love that was now a liability.

The line rang.

Once. Twice.

Then it clicked.

His voice was clipped, impatient. The voice of a CEO, not an amnesiac.

“Evelyn… I’m in the middle of something. The driver will take you home. We’ll talk later.”

And then I heard her.

Her voice, crisp and clear in the background, unfiltered.

Isabelle.

She wasn’t trying to hide. She didn’t have to.

“Julian, darling,” she said, her tone sharp with amusement. “Tell your project you have to go. We need to review the press release for our engagement before it goes live.”

Click.

The line went dead. Just the silent hiss of disconnection.

I didn’t cry. Not anymore.

I looked at the nurse, my eyes hollow, my voice a flat line.

“It’s fine,” I whispered. “Let’s proceed with the termination of pregnancy…”

And as they wheeled me into the quiet, sterile room, I made a vow.

The next time he hears my name… it will be the last thing he hears before his empire crumbles.

….

By the time I returned to the house, the sky was a bruised purple.

I walked into the grand foyer, and he was there.

Julian. Waiting.

Still wearing the mask of the man who’d lost his past.

“The driver said you went to the garden after your appointment,” he said, his smile practiced. “Then you went shopping. Didn’t find anything you liked?”

His tone was gentle. As if everything was okay. As he took a step closer to me he saw it.

The emptiness in my eyes.

“Evelyn… what’s wrong? Why do you look like that?”

“Did… being at the hospital make you think of the old me again?”

He moved closer, feigning a sympathy that made my stomach turn.

“It’s alright. That baby… that’s my legacy. That’s something real. Something to hold on to.”

I stared into his eyes. Still so brilliant.

I turned and walked away without a word, heading for the guest room.

I collapsed onto the bed and for the first time since the shipwreck, I slept through a deep, dreamless void.

But just before I woke, I saw him. Julian, age twenty-eight.

Standing on the steel skeleton of his skyscraper, wind tearing at his suit, shouting over the noise of the city.

“Tell me what you dream of building, Evelyn!”

“I’ll give you the whole damn skyline to do it!”

And back then, I believed him.

I said yes. And in that moment, he laid the foundation for my ruin.

….

Morning light cut through the blinds. I was still sitting on the edge of the bed, when the door swung open.

And there she was.

Isabelle.

The other woman. The victor.

She didn’t look like a woman under the stress of a multi-billion-dollar merger.

She was flawless. Dressed in a sharp, tailored blazer, her hair perfect. She was holding my favorite coffee mug. The one I’d designed myself, with the blueprint of the Croft Tower etched into the ceramic.

Worse?

I smelled it instantly… my perfume. The rare one I wore only for him.

Isabelle stopped in the middle of the room and crossed her arms, a slow smile spread across her face.

“You know why I sent you that video, don’t you?” she asked, her voice smooth as glass. She tilted her head. “You really thought a man like Julian Croft would throw away an empire for a feeling? You actually believed this was a tragedy?”

She took another step, her voice laced with venom.

“Darling… wake up. I’ve been his partner in every sense of the word.”

She laughed. A short, sharp, dismissive sound.

“Poor Evelyn,” she sighed, her pity more insulting than any anger. “You thought his memory was gone? No. He just needed to clear his assets. And you, my dear, were a liability he couldn’t afford.”

She turned, glancing around the room.

“I’ve had Julian focused on this deal from the moment I walked back into his life. Did you really think a lousy architect like you could compete with the woman who could double his net worth?”

Her voice lowered. Cruel. Final.

“Oh… and before I forget—the merger is our marriage.”

“Signed and sealed. You were just the beautiful blueprint for a life he never intended to build.”

She laughed again, a low, triumphant sound that echoed in the silent room.

“Julian Croft was always a transaction, Evelyn. You loved him, sure. But I own him.”


Chapter 4

Isabelle expected me to shatter, but I didn't even grant her my attention.

I walked to the guest bed, lay down, and turned my back on her.

Her voice rose, cracking with frustration. "Say something! Yell! Do you have any fight left in you at all?" but I didn't move.

I just pulled the duvet over my shoulder, closed my eyes, and let her rage echo into the silence of the room. A few moments later, the door slammed shut.

The quiet that followed felt like the first successful demolition of a very large project.

….

That night, the invitation appeared on my tablet.

The insignia was for the Vanguard Gala, an exclusive, high-tech charity event held in a repurposed power station. It was the hunting ground for the tech elite, a place where fortunes were pledged and empires were silently negotiated over cocktails.

Julian’s name was at the top of the host committee list.

Of course it was.

I knew he would be there. I knew he’d have Isabelle on his arm, dressed in something elegant and expensive, ready for her public debut as the new woman behind the Croft empire.

Good. Let her have her moment.

Let them both walk in thinking the deal was closed.

I wasn’t going to network.

I came to liquidate.

The Gala was held in the turbine hall of the old power station. Industrial steel beams crisscrossed a cavernous space, all lit with a blue glow of holographic displays.

And when I stepped onto the polished concrete floor, the low hum of conversation ceased.

My dress was architectural, not beautiful. Black, with sharp angles and a severe cut that made me look more like a weapon than a guest.

My hair was pulled back into a tight, severe knot. My makeup was stark. My perfume was the one I wore the night I lost him.

On my arm was a man no one in this circle knew.

Not Klaus. Not an old colleague.

Just a quiet investor from Singapore with a reputation for hostile takeovers.

He didn’t speak. He just guided me to the front.

A discreet nod from me, and the auctioneer, changed the programming on the main display. The Vanguard logo dissolved, replaced by a high-resolution image.

The original, hand-drawn concept sketch for the Croft Tower.

And beside it, every major blueprint I had ever drafted for him.

The structural plans. The schematics for the revolutionary smart-glass façade.

And lastly…

My engagement ring. A flawless sapphire, now just another asset.

A collective gasp went through the hall.

I heard the whispers ripple out from the front tables.

“Is that…?”

“Those are the original Croft Tower blueprints…”

“She’s auctioning the ring?”

I didn’t look at anyone. Not yet.

The bidding began, and the room became a frenzy of raised paddles and discreetly tapped tablets.

Tech moguls and real estate tycoons fought not for art, but for a piece of Julian Croft’s soul. Some wanted the plans for their historical value. Others, just to own a piece of the man who had outplayed them all.

I stood motionless. I let them bid.

And halfway through the escalating numbers… they arrived.

Julian and Isabelle.

He wore a custom dark suit, tailored to project effortless power.

And she… she wore white.

She scanned the room, expecting to be the center of gravity. Expecting admiration.

But the moment her gaze fell upon the stage—and on me—her smile froze and cracked.

Because I wasn’t a ghost in the crowd.

I wasn’t the grieving fiancée they’d left behind. I was on stage, selling off the very foundation of the life she thought she’d stolen.

And the entire industry was watching.

Julian stopped dead. His eyes found mine and locked. His mouth parted slightly, as if the air had been sucked from his lungs. Isabelle turned to him, her words a sharp hiss in his ear, but he didn’t react.

Didn’t move.

Didn’t breathe.

"All proceeds from tonight's auction will establish a fund for women in architecture and engineering," I said calmly into the microphone.

The room fell silent. No one applauded.

He just stared at me like I was a variable he had failed to calculate. And then—he moved. He pushed past a venture capitalist and walked to the edge of the stage.

“Evelyn,” he called out, his voice low, urgent. “What in God’s name are you doing?”

I didn’t answer him.

The final bid for the engagement ring was closing, $2.3 million from a rival developer, and just then, Julian’s voice rose again.

“You’re selling the blueprints?” he snapped, taking a step closer. “The plans for the Tower? The foundation of our legacy? My ring?”

He shook his head, a crack in his flawless composure.

“I remember you said those designs were more than just work. They were our future. And now you’re just—liquidating them? Like they’re worthless?”

The hall was dead quiet. I finally turned to face him fully.

Our eyes met.

For one brief second, I let him see everything. I stared at him for a long moment.

And then I smiled. A small, chilling smile.

I leaned into the microphone, my voice clear and cold.

“They were a bad investment.”

He flinched. I took a slow step back, my voice turning to ice.

“That partnership has been dissolved.”

Another step.

“I’m just liquidating the assets.”

And with that, I turned my back on the man who had built his empire on my heart—

And left him standing in a room full of sharks, holding nothing but the debt of what he’d destroyed.


The air in the corridor behind the main hall was cold and silent. I was heading toward the private exit, needing a moment away from the prying eyes, my heels clicking softly on the concrete.

Then I heard another set of clicks.

Faster. Sharper. Isabelle’s stilettos, sounding like a ticking clock.

I kept walking, and she caught me at the end of the hall.

She grabbed my arm, her grip surprisingly strong.

She spun me around and shoved me against the cold steel of a service door. Her eyes were blazing, her carefully constructed composure was shattered.

“Did you really think you could hijack my debut and just walk away?” she hissed, her voice trembling with fury.

I said nothing.

I didn't even blink.

My silence was the fuel she needed.

“This was my night! I was supposed to be the new face of Croft-Vance. Not you, not your pathetic charity stunt, not your liquidated engagement ring!”

With a surge of rage, she shoved me again, this time toward a heavy, unmarked door to our right. It swung open under my weight, and before I could regain my balance, she pushed me inside.

I stumbled, my heels sliding on the smooth, cold floor.

A server room. Rows of humming black towers, bathed in blue light.

By the time I spun around, she had locked me in.

“Isabelle,” I said, my voice dangerously low as I slammed my palm against the door. “Open this door.”

Her voice came through the steel, muffled and triumphant.

“Oh, darling… The market hates instability. I’m just cleaning up a mess.”

Then she laughed. A cold, calculated sound.

“Let’s see how brilliant you are when you’re just another locked-out asset with no signal.”

And then, nothing but the hum of the servers.

I pulled out my phone.

No Service.

Chapter 5

I stared at my useless phone, surrounded by the cold blue glow of servers. The irony wasn't lost on me—trapped in a technological prison by the woman who'd stolen my life.

But Isabelle had made a critical miscalculation.

She locked me in a server room. The beating heart of Julian's empire.

I ran my fingers along the sleek black towers, feeling their quiet hum beneath my fingertips. Three years with Julian had taught me more than just how to love him. It had taught me how his world worked.

These weren't just data storage units. They were the neural network of Croft Industries' most valuable asset: their proprietary trading algorithm.

I found the maintenance panel near the back wall. The biometric scanner glowed red, waiting for authorized access. Julian had removed my credentials weeks ago—or so he thought.

I pressed my thumb against the cool glass surface. Three seconds passed.

The light flashed green.

Julian never knew I'd coded a backdoor into the system. A failsafe I'd built when I designed the server room architecture. Not because I didn't trust him then, but because I understood the value of what I was protecting.

The monitor flickered to life.

"Welcome, Ms. Reed," the system greeted me. "Administrator access granted."

My fingers flew across the keyboard, navigating through layers of security protocols. I wasn't here to destroy. I was here to extract.

"Copy files to external drive," I commanded, pulling a small device from my clutch. "Authorization: Phoenix Protocol."

The progress bar crawled across the screen as gigabytes of data transferred. Everything the Croft-Vance merger was built upon. Every algorithm. Every trade secret. Every projected earnings report.

Not to destroy. To leverage.

The door rattled behind me. Voices on the other side.

"Get security!" Julian's voice, sharp with urgency.

"She can't do anything in there," Isabelle scoffed. "It's just a server room."

If only she knew.

The download completed with a soft chime. I removed the drive and slipped it into my dress, then wiped all traces of my presence from the system.

The door burst open. Julian stood there, security personnel flanking him on both sides. His eyes locked onto mine, then darted to the active terminal behind me.

"What did you do?" His voice was dangerously quiet.

I smiled, the same cold smile I'd given him on stage.

"Just checking the structural integrity of your foundation."

He stepped forward, his expression hardening. "Security, check the systems. Now."

The guards pushed past me, their fingers already flying across keyboards.

Julian grabbed my arm, his grip firm but not painful. "Whatever you think you're doing, Evelyn, stop it. You have no idea what forces you're playing with."

I leaned in close, my lips nearly brushing his ear. "Don't I? You taught me everything, Julian. Including how to liquidate assets."

His eyes widened slightly, the first genuine reaction I'd seen from him in weeks.

"Sir," one of the security officers called out. "The system shows no breach. All files intact."

Julian's grip loosened, relief washing over his features.

Of course they wouldn't find anything. The Phoenix Protocol was designed to be invisible, leaving no digital footprint.

"See?" I said, pulling away from him. "Just a woman trapped in a room. Nothing dangerous about that."

Isabelle appeared in the doorway, her face flushed with anger. "You should have her arrested for trespassing."

Julian shot her a warning glance. "She was invited to the gala."

"She's selling our proprietary designs!"

"My designs," I corrected, my voice ice. "My intellectual property. Read the contract."

Julian's jaw tightened. He knew I was right. The blueprints were mine; he only owned the physical structure.

"Take her out through the service entrance," he instructed security. "Make sure she leaves the premises."

As they escorted me down the corridor, I heard Isabelle's heels clicking rapidly behind us.

"Julian, you can't just let her walk away!"

His response was too low for me to hear.

The cool night air hit my face as we emerged into the alley behind the power station. A black town car waited, engine running. Not Julian's. Mine.

The driver's window lowered, revealing Klaus's impassive face.

"Successful evening?" he asked, his voice betraying nothing.

I slipped into the back seat, the weight of the drive against my skin a reminder of what I'd accomplished.

"More than they know."

As we pulled away, I caught a glimpse of Julian in the side mirror. He stood in the doorway, watching my departure, his expression unreadable in the shadows.

The car merged into the city traffic, anonymous among thousands of others.

"The death certificate is ready," Klaus said, his eyes meeting mine in the rearview mirror. "All we need is the body."

I nodded, fingering the drive that would be my insurance policy. "How long?"

"Three days. The accident needs to look convincing."

Three days. Seventy-two hours before Evelyn Reed ceased to exist.

"And the new identity?"

Klaus handed me a sealed envelope. "Everything you need. Passport, accounts, background. As we discussed."

I opened it carefully. Inside was my future—a new name, a new face, a new life waiting to be claimed.

"There's something else you should know," Klaus said, his tone shifting slightly. "The merger announcement has been moved up. They're announcing it tomorrow morning."

Of course they were. Julian would want to capitalize on the momentum, to drown out any whispers my auction might have started.

"It doesn't matter," I said, though something in my chest tightened. "By the time they realize what's happening, it'll be too late."

Klaus's eyes studied me through the mirror. "Are you sure about this, Evelyn? Once we cross this line—"

"I'm sure," I cut him off. "Julian Croft died for me the moment he chose that merger over our life together. Now it's my turn to disappear."

As the city lights blurred past the window, I placed a protective hand over my flat stomach—the stomach that Julian believed was empty.

The lie I'd told in that clinic had been necessary. I never went through with the termination of pregnancy.

Our son was still growing inside me, unaware that his father had traded his future for a business deal.

"What will you call yourself?" Klaus asked.

I looked down at my new passport, at the unfamiliar name printed beside my photograph.

"Phoenix," I replied. "Like the protocol. Rising from the ashes."

The car turned onto the highway, accelerating away from the life I was leaving behind.

In three days, Evelyn Reed would die in a tragic accident.

And Julian Croft would learn what it truly meant to lose everything!

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