She Returned To A Billionaire Wedding With Four Hidden Children-felicia

My name is Emma Carter.

Five years ago, I learned that some men do not threaten you because they have already built a world where threat is unnecessary.

Victor Harrison had that kind of world.

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He owned buildings in Seattle that people pointed to from ferries and office windows.

He sat on hospital boards, chaired charity galas, funded scholarships, and appeared in glossy magazines under headlines about vision, legacy, and disciplined leadership.

People called him generous because they never had to sit across from him while he explained the price of your disappearance.

I did.

It happened on a wet Thursday afternoon in October, inside the top-floor office of a glass tower in downtown Seattle, Washington.

Rain moved down the windows in thin silver lines.

Far below, traffic pressed through the streets, headlights blurred in the gray.

Inside Victor’s office, everything was controlled.

The temperature was cool.

The carpet swallowed sound.

The artwork on the walls looked calm, expensive, and impossible to touch.

Victor Harrison sat behind a polished desk with his hands folded in front of him, dressed in a charcoal suit that probably cost more than every piece of clothing I owned.

He did not look angry.

That was what made him frightening.

Anger at least admits the fight is happening.

Victor’s calm suggested the fight had been settled before I arrived.

On the desk between us were three things.

A silver pen.

A document titled Private Separation Agreement.

And a check.

The check was made out to me.

$120,000,000.

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