Billionaire Slapped His Wife, Then Begged Sia To Save His Empire-kieutrinh

The ballroom had been designed to make cruelty look expensive.

Crystal chandeliers burned above the auction stage, champagne moved in bright little rivers, and every guest in the Plaza ballroom had practiced the polite face of people who smelled scandal before dessert.

Stella Sterling stood beside the silver charity tray with Carter’s fingers locked around her left wrist.

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Her grandmother’s antique cushion-cut diamond ring sat tight on her swollen finger, tighter than usual, because two weeks earlier a doctor had told her she was pregnant.

She had not told Carter yet.

Then Chloe Bennett looked at the ring and sighed like a saint.

“It looks so much like the one my grandmother left me,” Chloe said from her wheelchair, her thin white dress folded around her knees. “I only wanted it as a keepsake.”

Carter’s jaw tightened.

Chloe covered her mouth and coughed softly, then added that she only had a few months left and should not be fighting over little things.

Stella knew that performance.

She had watched Chloe use weakness like a velvet glove around a knife, and she had watched Carter soften every time that glove touched him.

“Take it off,” Carter said.

“No,” Stella answered.

The word made the closest guests go still.

Carter stared at her as if his obedient wife had suddenly spoken in a language he did not own.

“It is a broken five-carat rock,” he said. “I can buy you ten better ones tomorrow.”

“This belonged to my grandmother.”

He did not let her finish.

His hand clamped around her ring finger, and he pulled with a violence so casual that it felt rehearsed.

The metal scraped over her swollen knuckle, tearing skin, and pain shot up her arm so fast her vision flashed white.

The ring came loose in his hand.

He tossed it toward the auction tray.

It hit silver, bounced to the carpet, and rolled out through the open ballroom doors.

Stella looked at her empty finger.

“Are you crazy?” she asked.

Carter slapped her.

The sound cracked through the ballroom and killed the music.

Her head snapped sideways, her cheek burned, and the inside of her mouth filled with the metallic taste of a wound she refused to show.

“If you cannot learn basic decency,” Carter said, adjusting his cuff, “you do not deserve to stand here.”

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