After Her Devoted Husband Faked His Death, the Cold Female CEO Went Ma
Everyone in our social circle knew the truth: I was crazy about Jade Henson. The loyal dog kneeling at the hem of her skirt, desperate for a scrap of affection.
But reality was far colder. While I drank myself into a stomach hemorrhage to secure contracts for the Henson Group, she was out celebrating a new intern's birthday.
That night, something inside me finally snapped. I paid a doctor to forge a terminal stomach cancer diagnosis, faked my death, and vanished abroad.
Jade went insane. She hired countless mystics and mediums, trying to summon my soul, begging to see me just one more time.
She didn't get her wish until three years later.
I returned to the countrynot as her dog, but as a tycoon looking to expand my empire alongside my new wife. At the banquet, I ran into Jade. Haggard. A shadow of her former self.
Her eyes went wide. Shock first, then a glimmer of desperate hope. "Andrew? Andrew Mason, you finally came back to see me." Her voice cracked. "You've forgiven me, haven't you?"
A cold smile tugged at my lips. "Of course I came to see you, Jade." I straightened my cufflinks. "After all, I'm here to acquire the Henson Group. It's a birthday gift for my wife."
*Three years earlier.*
The glow of my phone screen cut through the darkness of the hospital room. Jade's latest social media post. Another photo. Another smile that wasn't for me.
A sharp pain gnawed at my gut. Beside my bed, the doctor clutched his clipboard like a shield.
"Mr. Mason, I cannot stress this enough." He adjusted his glasses, his tone grave. "No matter the reason, you cannot drink another drop of alcohol. If you continue down this path, your ulcers will deteriorate into stomach cancer."
I nodded. Feigned remorse. "I understand."
But beneath the guilt, a twisted sense of satisfaction curled in my chest. Another massive order secured for the Henson Group.
In the business world, they called me a "mad dog." I didn't care about my lifeonly the deal. Jade had used her love as a leash, binding me to her, making me a willing martyr for her family's company.
Three years of marriage. Three years of destroying my health with alcohol. Three years of dragging the Henson Group from the brink of bankruptcy back to its throne as an industry leader.
I believed, with absolute certainty, that Jade loved me.
So when I first noticed Max Pruittthe new interneyeing her with hungry intentions, I didn't hesitate. I staked my claim.
Jade had just chuckled, brushing it off. "You love being jealous, don't you, Andrew?"
But she didn't draw a line. Instead, she let him linger. Let herself tangle further in his orbit.
My jealousy festered into madness. I threw tantrums, eroding her patience until she finally snapped. One cold sentence before she walked out: "I'm taking Max to the Zhou Group to negotiate the deal. Think about your behavior while I'm gone."
This time, I didn't scream. Didn't beg. Didn't grab her arm and force her to say she loved me.
Instead, I went straight to Max Pruitt.
"The Henson Group doesn't welcome you." My voice came out flat. Dead. "Write your resignation letter. Now."
Max stood before me, face pale. He looked like a college student who hadn't yet shed his naive, bookish air. Yet he met my gaze with surprising stubbornness.
"Andrew, I'm not leaving." His fists clenched at his sides. "I know I'm not as capable as you yet, but I want to try. Please, give me a chance."
"A chance?" I signaled HR to send the termination notice immediately. "You think an intern is worthy of negotiating the Zhou deal? You?"
His jaw tightened. "Andrew, you can't fire me without cause."
I looked down at him, letting my contempt show. "Your performance is substandard. You failed your probation. That is cause enough."
I leaned in close. My voice dropped to a whisper. "Out of humanitarian pity, I'll give you ten thousand bucks in severance. But youget out. Now."
Before he could respond, the office door slammed open.
The sharp staccato of high heels cut through the tension. Jade Henson marched in.
For years, she had rarely stepped foot in the company, entrusting everything to me. One hundred percent faith in my judgment.
But today, she didn't even glance in my direction. She walked straight to Max's side and, in front of the entire staff, ripped the termination notice in half.
Her hand settled on his shoulder. Her voice dripped with a gentleness I hadn't heard in years.
"Don't be afraid, Max. As long as I'm here, no one can fire you." Her gaze swept the room. "You will always be a part of the Henson Group."
Jade turned, ready to lead Max out of the office like a protective mother hen.
Rage boiled through my veins. My hands trembled as I roared, "Jade! Are you joking? He's incompetent! He doesn't meet the baseline requirements. What kind of message does this send to the other employees?"
She stopped. Turned slowly. Ice filled her eyes.
"I said what I said. I will personally take him to the Zhou Group negotiations."
Her chin lifted in defiance. "And when this deal closes, he will replace you as the top salesperson of the year."
Jade had it all calculated. She wanted to groom him. Unfortunately, Max Pruitt was mudyou couldn't build a wall with him no matter how hard you tried.
She took him to the client meeting, but Max treated the business trip like a vacation. Social media check-ins. Photos of food and scenery. Zero preparation for the actual negotiation. They ate, drank, playedcompletely ignoring the contract.
The clients at the Zhou Group were insulted. They had never seen such an arrogant vendor.
Furious, they canceled the order.
Three months of grueling overtime by the entire companyabout to go down the drain.
I couldn't let that happen. Desperate, I called in every favor I had. Half a month without sleep. Every night drinking with executives, schmoozing, apologizing, destroying my liver until I managed to salvage the deal and minimize the losses.
When Jade brought Max back, there was no apology. She simply processed his paperwork and made him a permanent employee.
The staff was furious but silent. They looked at me with pity.
My fists clenched until my knuckles cracked. The next day, explicit photos of Max from his past life as a male escort mysteriously appeared in every employee's inbox.
Max didn't show up for work.
That night, my bedroom door slammed open.
Jade stormed in, face twisted in fury. Before I could speak, her hand connected hard with my cheek.
*Slap!*
Her long, manicured nails grazed my nose. Disgust burned in her eyes.
"Andrew Mason, you make me sick. How low can you sink?" Her scream echoed off the walls. "Do you know Max is an orphan? He has no family in this city! He was forced into that life!"
A finger jabbed into my chest. "Everyone has a past they want to bury. You exposing his scars like thishow is he supposed to survive now?"
She hadn't held back. My cheek throbbed, swelling instantly.
I ran my tongue over the tender flesh inside my mouth. Tasted copper. "Jade, have you forgotten?" My voice came out flat. "I'm an orphan too. I don't have a single relative in this city either."
I stepped closer. "As my wife, you publicly humiliate me for him, again and again. How am I supposed to survive?"
Guilt flickered across her face for a split second before she hardened her heart. "How can you compare yourself to him? You've been street-smart since you were a kidyou've even been in juvenile detention. Max is sensitive. It's not the same."
She convinced herself she was righteous. With cruel resolve, she pulled her phone from her bag. "Don't blame me, Andrew. I have to give Max justice."
My stomach dropped.
*What did she do?*
My phone buzzed violently in my pocket. I pulled it out.
Jade had uploaded a photo of me from years ago. Right after I got out of detentionfilthy, fighting stray dogs for scraps of food in an alley.
The comments poured in instantly.
*"Is this the CEO's husband? A beggar?"*
*"Disgusting."*
Mockery. Disgust. Memes.
The malice washed over me. I looked up at Jade's smug face.
Something inside me died.
"Jade." My voice sounded hollow, even to my own ears. "I want a divorce."
"What did you say?" She frowned.
Before she could argue, her phone rang. Max's voice drifted from the speaker, weak and trembling.
"Jade... thank you for everything these past few months."
"But I can't go on like this." Max sobbed on the other end of the line. "Let me say goodbye properly."
"No, Max! Don't do anything stupid! Wait for me, I'm coming right now!"
Panic seized Jade. She grabbed her coat and rushed out the door without a backward glance.
I opened my mouth to call out to her.
A sudden, searing pain ripped through my stomach.
I doubled over, clutching my abdomen.
*Retch.*
A massive mouthful of blood splattered onto the floor.
The smell of disinfectant stung my nose. Antiseptic white ceiling. Rhythmic beep of monitors.
Simon Chavez, my assistant, stood by the bed. His eyes were rimmed with red, and he looked like he was holding back tears.
I tried to smile. Probably looked more like a grimace. "Say it."
Simon exploded. "Andrew, it's not right! We all see it. You've bled for the Henson Group for years!"
He paced the small room. "Ms. Henson... she's been brainwashed by that kid! That's why she treats you like dirt. Don't listen to the people laughing online. The real staff, the ones who matter? We don't care about your past. We only know the Andrew who works himself to death for us."
A shaking finger pointed at the door. "If it weren't for you, the company would have gone under weeks ago."
Simon's words were a flicker of warmth in a frozen world. I waved my hand weakly, dismissing him.
I needed to be alone.
Silence descended. Only the rhythmic drip of the IV broke it.
Against my better judgment, I opened my phone. Checked her social media.
Jade had posted thirty minutes ago.
The photo was taken in a karaoke room, bathed in garish neon light. Max sat in front of a delicate birthday cake, hands clasped in prayer, eyes closed as he made a wish.
Jade was right next to him. Leaning intimately on his shoulder. Smiling brighter than she had smiled at me in years.
The caption read: *"My trusted pup said the life I saved is a new life. So, today is his new birthday. Happy Birthday, Max."*
Max had commented below: *"I wish that we both get everything our hearts desire."*
I zoomed in on the photo.
On their necksboth of themseveral dark, damning hickeys.
I stared at the red marks until my vision blurred. An invisible hand crushed my heart, squeezing the life out of me. Breathing became a physical battle.
Three years of marriage. A stomach hemorrhage. A hospital bed.
She was out partying with her intern, celebrating his "rebirth."
*What am I to her?*
Numbly, I dialed Jade's number.
It rang for a long time. When she finally picked up, bass thumped and laughter echoed in the background.
"What is it?" Sharp. Impatient.
I licked my cracked lips. "I left my laptop at home. There's an urgent document on it. Can you bring it to the hospital?"
A scoff. Loud and cruel.
"Andrew Mason, are you done yet?"
"Using this kind of pathetic excuse to trick me into coming over? Trying to separate me and Max?" Another laugh. "Does it make you feel better?"
I closed my eyes. A tear leaked out. "What if I'm really sick, Jade?"
"Sick? What sickness could you possibly have?" Her voice rose, dripping with mockery. "Don't tell me you're going to say cancer?"
She laugheda cold, jagged sound. "Andrew, you really won't stop acting just to get some sympathy, will you?"
*Cancer.*
The word hit me like a physical blow.
I never thought the most vicious venom would come from the mouth of the woman I loved.
In that silence, the last ember of what I once called love flickered and died.
Three words. Flat. Final.
"Let's get divorced."
I didn't wait for a response. I ended the call.
The hospital became my world for the next seven days. White walls. Fluorescent hum. The sharp bite of antiseptic in every breath.
Alone.
Jade Henson didn't visit. Not once. No calls. No messages. Her social media told me everything I needed to knowa curated shrine to her "rediscovered youth," plastered with photos of champagne toasts and Max Pruitt's glowing new beginning.
It wasn't until I finished the discharge paperwork and dragged my unsteady body back home that I saw her again.
She lounged on the living room sofa in a champagne silk nightgown, legs crossed with practiced elegance, a fashion magazine splayed across her lap. The door clicked open.
She didn't look up.
Her perfume hung thick in the airexpensive, cloyingclashing violently with the antiseptic still clinging to my clothes.
"You finally decided to come back?"
Glacial. Dripping with accusation.
"I thought you'd actually grown a spine and learned to run away from home."
I kicked off my shoes. Dropped the bag with my medical records onto the entryway cabinet. The incision in my stomach throbbed, a dull, persistent ache that had become as familiar as breathing.
"I was sick." I met her gaze. "I've been in the hospital for a week."
Her hand paused over the glossy page.
Finally, she looked up.
Those eyesthe ones I used to drown inheld nothing but mockery and disbelief.
"Sick? Hospitalized?"
A scoff. Like she'd heard the world's worst joke.
"Andrew Mason, there has to be a limit to your tantrums over a single photo, right? Using a fake illness to garner sympathydon't you think that's pathetic?"
So that's what this was to her. My agony. A clumsy farce performed for her attention.
My heart had been numb for so long her cruelty didn't even sting.
When I didn't rise to the bait, the ridicule on her face faded. Replaced by bored magnanimity. She beckoned me over, her tone softening into something patronizing.
"Alright, look. I know you're upset, but Max is differenthe's sensitive. He's a newcomer to the workplace. He messed up a major project, and then you went and spread that photo. How do you expect him to show his face in the company now?"
A sigh. The benevolent peacekeeper.
"Let's consider the matter settled. Sign this document, and I'll pretend none of this happened."
She lifted a folder from the coffee table. Held it out.
I took it.
The bold black title stabbed at my eyes.
**Company Equity Transfer Agreement.**
My name, printed clearly under "Transferor."
Under "Transferee," three words in stark relief: **Max Pruitt.**
Jade's voice droned on, laced with sickening charity.
"At the end of the day, you wronged Max. Treat this equity as compensation. Andrew, this is what you owe him."
*I owe him?*
I looked at the woman before mea face I once knew better than my ownand saw a stranger.
I didn't argue. There was no point.
Silently, I opened my bag. From beneath a stack of hospital receipts, I pulled out a different document. Simon Chavez had printed it the night before my discharge.
I placed it on the coffee table.
Slid it directly over her ridiculous equity transfer agreement.
Jade frowned. "What is this?"
My voice was steady. Distinct.
"A divorce agreement. You sign yours. Then I'll sign yours."
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