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The Jilted Heiress And The Cold CEO

The Jilted Heiress And The Cold CEO

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For five years in London, I held onto the Carlisle patriarch's promise: when I returned, Ethan and I would finally get married. But when I rushed into Ethan's arms at the airport, his phone rang, and everything shattered. "Just picking up my sister," he cooed to the woman on the other end. He didn't take me home. He drove straight to his girlfriend, Morgan, letting her passionately kiss him right in front of me. At my welcome party, Morgan deliberately rigged a game of Truth or Dare to publicly humiliate me. She forced Ethan to choose between his girlfriend and his "ward" of a sister. Under the flashing club lights, the man who had chased away every guy I ever talked to just sat there, letting his friends tear me apart as a pathetic joke. I didn't understand. If I was just a sister, why did he call me every night? Why did he spend years giving me false hope, only to trample on my dignity so casually? Standing outside the club, shivering and utterly disillusioned, I made my choice. I turned my back on Ethan and walked straight toward Damien Carlisle-the ruthless, terrifying family CEO everyone feared. "I want to work in your department," I told him. I was done being their fragile little ornament. It was time to build an empire of my own.

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The Jilted Heiress And The Cold CEO Chapter 1

"Is that him?" Alex Miller asked, nudging Ava Hayes with his elbow. "The guy you flew halfway across the world for?"

Ava's fingers tightened around the handle of her suitcase, the plastic digging into her palm. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic rhythm that matched the bustling energy of JFK's arrivals hall. She scanned the crowd, her breath catching in her throat.

"He's not... we're not..." she stammered, a faint blush creeping up her neck. "Ethan is just the most important person in my life."

Five years. It felt like a lifetime since the Carlisle family had sent her away to London for university. A decision made by the patriarch, Alistair Carlisle, that had felt like a surgical removal from the only life she'd ever known. Her one comfort had been Alistair's parting words, a half-joking promise that when she returned, it would be time for her and Ethan to "settle things." That promise had been the fuel for every late-night study session, every lonely holiday.

Ethan had never let her feel truly alone. Weekly video calls where his laughter filled her tiny dorm room. Thoughtful gifts for every birthday and Christmas, always something she'd casually mentioned wanting weeks before. He remembered everything. That constant, unwavering attention had been the bedrock of her belief that what they had was more than the sibling-like bond the family pushed on them.

This return wasn't just a homecoming. It was a mission. To finally break through the ambiguity, to start her career at Sterling-Carlisle, and to build a life that was truly hers, both professionally and personally.

Then she saw him.

Leaning against a sleek, black Aston Martin, Ethan Carlisle was exactly as she remembered, only more so. The casual jacket, the dark jeans, the easy confidence that made him the center of any room. He was a supernova in a sea of flickering lights.

He spotted her, and a slow grin spread across his face. He pushed off the car, stubbing out his cigarette with the toe of his boot, and opened his arms wide.

Ava dropped her suitcase handle and ran, the last few feet closing in a rush of relief and pure joy. He caught her, lifting her off the ground in a hug that smelled of expensive cologne and the faint, familiar scent of him. He buried his face in her hair, ruffling it playfully.

"Welcome home, Aves," he murmured into her ear.

She was home. The thought was a wave of warmth washing over her.

Just as she was melting into the embrace, a cheerful, upbeat ringtone cut through the moment. Ethan let her go, pulling his phone from his pocket. He glanced at the screen, and the easygoing smile on his face shifted, softening into something more intimate, more tender.

"Hey," he said into the phone, his voice a low, gentle murmur that Ava had never heard him use with anyone.

A woman's voice, sweet and slightly demanding, drifted from the speaker. "Where are you, baby?"

Ethan chuckled, running a hand through his hair. "Airport. Just picking up my sister."

The word hit Ava like a physical blow. Sister. Her smile froze, cracking at the edges. Her stomach plummeted, a sickening lurch that left her feeling weightless and hollow. It wasn't the affectionate term a brother might use. It was an explanation. A clarification. A boundary drawn in bright, sharp lines for the benefit of another woman.

He was still talking, his voice soothing. "Just a friend, I told you. Don't overthink it."

A friend. The word was a second shot, fired immediately after the first. A cold dread, sharp and numbing, seeped into her bones, chilling her from the inside out. Ethan wasn't this considerate. He was possessive, a little arrogant, and never bothered to explain himself to anyone.

He hung up, pocketing the phone. "Sorry about that. A friend's car got into a little fender bender. I need to go help her deal with it." He gestured for her suitcase, oblivious to the devastation on her face.

The information hit her in fragments. A girlfriend. A car accident. A destination that clearly wasn't the Carlisle estate. She remembered all the times he'd been possessive, chasing off any guy who showed her the slightest interest. She had mistaken it for love. Now, standing in the harsh airport lighting, it felt like something else entirely. Ownership.

The exhaustion of the transatlantic flight, the jet lag she'd been ignoring, crashed down on her all at once, amplified by the shock. A wave of dizziness washed over her, and she swayed on her feet.

Ethan's casual mention of his cousin only made it worse. "Damien's probably at home, wearing that same stick-up-his-ass expression. Just ignore him."

Damien Carlisle. The name alone sent a shiver of apprehension through her. He was the one person in the family she truly feared.

As Ethan loaded her suitcase into the trunk, she watched him set the navigation on his phone. The destination was a trendy, bustling neighborhood in the heart of the city. Not home.

She wanted to scream, to demand answers, but her throat was tight with unshed tears. He got into the driver's seat, humming a cheerful tune, completely unaware of the world that had just shattered at his feet. The casualness of his cruelty was what hurt the most. It made her five years of longing feel pathetic, ridiculous.

Ava took a deep, shaky breath, the air burning her lungs. The ambiguity had to end. Now.

"Who was that on the phone?" she asked, her voice surprisingly steady. "Is she your girlfriend?"

Ethan shot her a sideways glance, a smirk playing on his lips. "What are you thinking? And even if she was, it's not your place to ask, little sister."

He said it with a laugh, comparing her to his other cousins, lumping her in with the rest of the family. He wasn't just drawing a boundary. He was building a wall, brick by painful brick, and locking her on the other side.

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