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He Betrayed Me at My Lowest. I Met Him at His Peak

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escape while being pregnant
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Blurb

When Elara Vance was at her breaking point—homeless, grieving, and clutching a positive pregnancy test—she turned to the only person she ever trusted: Julian Thorne. But instead of the protection he promised, he gave her a cold shoulder and a one-way ticket out of his life, choosing his family’s empire over their "pathetic" love.Five years later, Elara is no longer the girl who begs. She has rebuilt her life from the ashes, fueled by a quiet strength and the secret she kept from the world. But fate has a cruel sense of humor.When her new job lands her in the inner sanctum of the tech industry’s most ruthless billionaire, she finds herself face-to-face with the man who destroyed her. Julian Thorne is now at his peak—more powerful, more handsome, and more dangerous than ever. He doesn't recognize the woman he discarded, but he wants her.He thinks he can win her with his billions, unaware that Elara isn't there for his money or his heart."You told me I was a mistake you couldn't afford, Julian. Now, I’m the debt you’ll never be able to pay off."As the past and present collide, Julian is determined to claim her, but Elara has a bombshell that could topple his empire: The child he never knew existed is waiting at home.

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The Rain & The Ruin
The rain in Crestview was relentless. it beat hard against the cracked windows of the bus station, loud and cold, matching the panic rising in Elara Vance’s chest. ​In her trembling hand, she clutched two slips of paper that represented the total sum of her existence. One was a positive pregnancy test, the blue lines appearing like a cruel joke against the plastic; the other was a crumpled eviction notice, the ink bleeding into the cheap paper from the dampness of her palms. ​"He’ll help," she whispered, her voice a ghost of a sound that was immediately swallowed by the wind whistling through the station’s rafters. She looked at the empty, cold bench beside her, imagining Julian sitting there, his warm hand covering hers. "Julian loves me. He promised we’d find a way." ​She had spent her last ten dollars—money meant for a week’s worth of bread—on a taxi to the Thorne Estate. As the car wound up the private mountain road, the lush greenery of the rich felt like a different planet. Elara stood at the towering iron gates, soaked to the bone within seconds. Her cheap cotton dress, once a cheerful yellow, now clung to her frail frame like a second skin of misery. She looked like a ghost haunting the doorstep of royalty, a smudge of poverty on a landscape of perfection. ​When the gates finally groaned open, the mechanical hum sounding like a warning, it wasn't Julian who stepped out into the deluge. ​It was his mother, Beatrice Thorne. ​Beatrice didn't carry an umbrella; she didn't need to. She stood under the deep portico, draped in charcoal silk that cost more than Elara’s entire life. Her eyes weren't filled with pity; they were as sharp and analytical as a diamond cutter's tools. ​"He doesn't want to see you, Elara," Beatrice said. Her voice wasn't loud, yet it carried over the thunder, sounding like dry ice hitting water. "Julian is being inaugurated as the sole heir to Thorne Industries tonight. It is the most important night of his life. Do you really think he has room in his world for a... girl from the gutters? Especially one so desperate she’d try to trap him with a bastard child?" ​Elara’s breath hitched, a sob catching in her throat that tasted like copper and rain. "How did you—?" ​"I know everything that happens in my son's life. And so does Julian." Beatrice stepped forward, the heels of her designer shoes clicking rhythmically on the stone. She tossed a thick, heavy envelope at Elara’s feet. It hit the mud with a wet thud, bursting open to reveal stacks of hundred-dollar bills. The sight of it made Elara feel nauseous. ​"He said this is the price for your silence," Beatrice continued, her lips curling into a thin, bloodless smile. "Consider it a refund for the time he wasted on you. Use it to disappear. If you ever show your face near him again, I will personally ensure your father’s medical debts are bought by our holding company and converted into a prison sentence. Do you understand?" ​"I want to hear it from him," Elara choked out, her vision blurring as the salt of her tears mixed with the fresh water of the storm. "Julian! Julian, please!" ​She looked up at the sprawling mansion, her eyes searching the glowing windows. For a heartbeat, a shadow appeared on the third-floor balcony. Hope, cruel and sudden, surged in her chest. It was him. Even through the sheets of rain, she recognized the breadth of his shoulders, the specific tilt of his head. Julian Thorne. The man who had whispered about a future under the stars just three months ago in a cramped apartment. ​He looked down at her. Elara reached out a hand, a silent plea for him to come down, to stop this nightmare. But Julian didn't move. He didn't wave. His face was a mask of cold, aristocratic indifference, illuminated briefly by a flash of lightning. Then, with a slow, deliberate motion, he reached for the heavy velvet curtains and closed them. ​The light from the room vanished. The world plunged into total darkness. That was the moment Elara Vance died. ​Five Years Later ​The humidity of the city felt nothing like the freezing rain of that night. It was a heavy, suffocating heat that smelled of ambition and exhaust fumes. ​Elara Vance stood before the floor-to-ceiling windows of her hotel suite, the skyline laid out before her like a blueprint waiting to be redrawn. She adjusted the collar of her cream-colored power suit, the fabric crisp and expensive. In her hand was a tablet displaying the real-time stock price of Thorne Industries. It was at an all-time high. ​Julian had reached his peak. He had built the empire his mother had promised him, but Elara knew the foundation was cracked. ​"Mommy? Can I wear my dinosaur tie?" ​The ice in Elara’s veins thawed instantly. She turned, her cold, professional mask melting into a soft, genuine smile. Leo stood by the edge of the king-sized bed, his brow furrowed in concentration as he struggled with a clip-on tie. He was five years old, a perfect blend of innocence and intellect. He had a mess of dark, unruly curls and his father’s stormy gray eyes—eyes that reminded Elara every single day of the betrayal, but also of the only reason she had found the strength to build a new life from the ashes in London. ​"Not today, Leo," Elara said, kneeling to help him. "Mrs. Gable is going to take you to the aquarium while Mommy goes to her meeting. You love the sharks, remember?" ​"Is it a big meeting?" Leo asked, his small hand patting her cheek. ​"The biggest of my life, peanut. I’m going to go see about a building." ​"A tall one?" ​"The tallest," Elara whispered, kissing his forehead. ​The lobby of Thorne Tower was a cathedral of glass and steel, a monument to the ego of the men who built it. It was designed to make every visitor feel small, insignificant, and lucky to be there. Five years ago, Elara would have felt invisible here. Today, she felt like a predator entering a familiar hunting ground. ​As she stepped into the elevator, she caught her reflection in the polished steel doors. The girl with the wet hair and the broken heart was gone. In her place stood the Lead Consultant of Vance & Associates, a woman who had spent five years turning pain into architecture. ​The heavy oak doors of the boardroom swung open. ​"Gentlemen," the executive assistant announced, her voice echoing in the hallowed space. "The lead consultant from Vance & Associates has arrived." ​The room was filled with men in dark, charcoal suits—sharks in silk. But only one mattered. Julian Thorne sat at the head of the table, looking like a king sitting on a throne of his own making. He was mid-sentence, his finger tracing a flaw in a digital blueprint, but the moment his eyes met Elara’s, the air seemed to vanish from the room. ​The silence that followed was heavy enough to crush a person. It was the silence of a grave being opened. ​Julian’s eyes traveled from her expensive silk blouse to the sharp line of her jaw, searching for the ghost of the girl he had discarded. His face went through a violent transformation—first a deathly pale, then a flush of dark, dangerous heat. He stood up so abruptly that his heavy leather chair struck the wall behind him with a resounding crack. ​"Elara?" His voice wasn't a greeting; it was a fractured, low growl, thick with a thousand questions he had no right to ask. ​The board members looked at each other, confused, their quiet whispers filling the gaps in the tension. Elara didn't blink. She didn't let her hand shake. She walked to the empty seat directly opposite him, her heels clicking with a lethal precision on the marble floor. She set her leather portfolio down with a sharp, echoing thud. ​"It’s Ms. Vance, Mr. Thorne," she said, her voice clear, professional, and entirely devoid of the love that had once nearly destroyed her. "I understand your company is struggling with the structural integrity of the New Dawn project. My firm is not here for pleasantries. We are here to fix your mistakes." ​"Where have you been?" Julian ignored the blueprints entirely. He leaned over the table, his gaze burning into hers with a desperate, frantic energy. "You vanished. I had investigators in three countries, I searched every—" ​"I was where I needed to be," Elara interrupted, leaning forward until they were only inches apart across the mahogany divide. "Which was as far away from the Thorne family as humanly possible. Now, are we here to discuss the failing load-bearing pillars of your building, Mr. Thorne, or are you going to waste more of my firm’s billable hours on a past that died five years ago in the rain?" ​Julian’s jaw tightened so hard a muscle pulsed in his cheek. He looked like he wanted to roar, to demand the truth, to grab her and never let go. But the eyes of his investors were on him, and the weight of his empire held him back. ​"Fine," he gritted out, slowly lowering himself back into his chair, though his eyes never left hers. "Let’s talk business, Ms. Vance."

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