My husband shoved my nine-month-pregnant body off an icy cliff, believing a $50 million life insurance payout was worth my death. At my “funeral,” he stood beside his mistress and smirked. “They both froze to death,” he sneered.

“That useless woman deserved it.”

PART 1

Then the cathedral doors exploded open. Every head turned. I walked slowly down the aisle, arm-in-arm with my father—the billionaire CEO of the insurance empire…

He pushed me when the snow was loud enough to swallow my scream.

One second, I was begging my husband to take me home; the next, I was falling backward off Blackthorn Cliff, nine months pregnant, my fingers clawing at empty air while Victor Hale laughed above me.

“Don’t worry, Elena,” he called down, his voice bright with cruelty. “The baby won’t suffer long.”

The world shattered into white.

I hit a ledge halfway down. Pain burst through my ribs, my cheek, my belly. I tasted blood and ice.

Above me, Victor’s shadow leaned over the cliff, phone in hand, recording nothing but darkness.

Then came another voice. His mistress, Serena. “Is she dea//d?”

Victor laughed softly. “For fifty million dollars? She’d better be.”

They left me there.

For two hours, I did not move. I listened to my own breath turning thin. I pressed both hands over my belly and whispered to my unborn son, “Stay with me. Please. Just stay.”

A light swept across the snow. Not Victor. A rescue helicopter.

The man who climbed down to me wore a black coat, not a uniform. Silver hair. Steel eyes. A face I had seen once in an old photograph my mother had hidden behind her wedding certificate.

Adrian Cross. CEO of Cross Atlantic Insurance Group.

The company holding my life insurance policy. And, according to the letter my mother left me before she died, my biological father.

He knelt beside me, his expression breaking when he saw my face. “Elena?” he said.

I tried to answer, but only blood came out. His gloved hand covered mine over my belly. “You are not dying here.”

At the hospital, they cut my clothes from my frozen body. My cheek was torn. My wrist broken. My ribs cracked.

My son’s heartbeat flickered on the monitor like a candle refusing to go out.

Adrian stood beside my bed while I drifted between pain and darkness.

“Victor filed the claim already,” he said quietly. “He says you slipped. He says both you and the baby froze to de//ath.”

My mouth was too dry to speak. Adrian leaned closer. “He also requested fast settlement approval.”

That made my eyes open.

Victor thought I was dea/d. Victor thought my baby was dea//d. Victor thought grief had a signature and fifty million dollars had no memory.

I touched my scarred cheek. Then I smiled….

“He requested that the final, fifty-million-dollar settlement check be hand-delivered to him at the memorial service,” Adrian sneered, his hands balling into fists.

“He wants the payout quickly before any thorough investigation can be launched. He genuinely thinks he’s untouchable.”

I didn’t cry.

The fear that had once chained me to Victor, the constant anxiety of pleasing an abusive narcissist, was entirely eradicated.

I looked at my sleeping son, and then I looked back at the screen showing my husband’s fake tears.

“Give it to him,” I whispered, my voice hoarse but completely steady.

Adrian stopped pacing. He looked at me, his icy blue eyes widening slightly in surprise.

“Authorize the fast-track settlement, Adrian,” I commanded, the realization of the trap locking into place in my mind.

“Let him think he won. Let him sign the final, fraudulent payout documents in front of God, the press, and every single one of his elite friends.”

A slow, terrifying, deeply proud smile spread across Adrian’s face. He recognized his own ruthless corporate DNA running through my veins.

“Let him commit massive, documented, undeniable federal wire fraud and perjury on camera,” I finished, handing the tablet back to him.

“And then… we attend my funeral.”

Chapter 1: The Freezing Abyss

The world shattered into a blinding, deafening explosion of white.

I didn’t hear my own scream as I fell. The rushing wind tore the sound from my throat, replacing it with the terrifying, roaring silence of terminal velocity.

For three seconds, there was only the suffocating sensation of weightlessness. Then came the impact.

I hit the jagged, snow-covered stone ledge roughly forty feet down the face of Blackthorn Cliff. The agony was instantaneous, a brilliant, white-hot supernova of pain that radiated from my spine, fracturing my ribs and tearing the breath violently from my lungs. My skull slammed backward against the ice, a sickening crack echoing inside my head, instantly muddying my vision with dark, swirling patches of gray.

I lay broken, twisted awkwardly on a narrow outcropping of rock, dangling perilously above a four-hundred-foot drop into the freezing, churning ocean below. The biting, relentless winter wind howled around me, immediately beginning to freeze the blood seeping from the deep laceration on my cheek.

But the physical agony of my shattered ribs was eclipsed entirely by a blinding, primal, all-consuming terror.

I was nine months pregnant.

I desperately, frantically curled my body inward, wrapping my arms tightly around my swollen belly, praying to a God I hadn’t spoken to in years. Please, I begged silently, the cold stealing my voice. Please, let my baby be okay. Let him hold on.

Through the roaring wind, I heard the crunch of boots on the snow above me.

My husband, Victor, stood at the very edge of the cliff. He didn’t lean over with a rope. He didn’t scream for help. He stood tall, his silhouette a dark, menacing shadow against the gray winter sky.

Beside him stood Serena.

She was Victor’s “executive assistant.” She was also the woman he had been sleeping with for the last two years. She wore a bright red, designer ski jacket, entirely unbothered by the freezing temperature.

I strained to listen, praying for a sign of regret, a flicker of human empathy, a frantic realization that he had made a terrible mistake when he shoved me backward.

Instead, the chilling, sociopathic reality of their conversation drifted down to me like poison.

“Is she dead?” Serena’s voice floated down, laced with an impatient, grotesque curiosity. She sounded as though she were asking if a pest exterminator had finished a job.

Victor let out a soft, echoing laugh. It was a sound infinitely more terrifying than the howling wind or the deadly drop below me. It was the sound of a predator admiring his kill.

“For fifty million dollars?” Victor sneered, his voice dripping with absolute, unadulterated greed. “She’d better be. The insurance policy explicitly covers accidental death while hiking. The payout triggers the moment the search and rescue teams find her frozen corpse.”

“Good,” Serena replied, her tone completely devoid of a soul. “Let’s go back to the lodge. I’m freezing.”

I listened to the crunch of their boots fading into the distance. They walked away, leaving a heavily pregnant woman to freeze to death on a desolate mountain, all for a payout.

For two excruciating, agonizing hours, I lay on that freezing ledge. The snow began to bury me, a slow, white shroud creeping up my legs. The pain in my ribs was agonizing with every shallow breath. I kept my freezing, numb hands pressed firmly over my stomach. I felt a faint, fluttering kick against my palm.

He’s alive.

The maternal instinct, ancient and unstoppable, roared to life inside me. It pushed back against the hypothermia. It fought the encroaching darkness. I forced my eyes to stay open, staring into the swirling snow, refusing to let my son die in the dark.

Just as my vision began to narrow into a tiny, pinpoint tunnel of black, the world suddenly erupted into blinding, brilliant light.

A massive, high-intensity searchlight cut through the storm, illuminating the cliff face like midday. The deafening, heavy thrumming of a helicopter rotor beat against the stone, blowing the loose snow away.

It wasn’t a standard, orange Coast Guard rescue chopper. It was a sleek, matte-black, multi-million-dollar private helicopter.

A figure clad in heavy, professional alpine rescue gear repelled down a thick synthetic line, dropping directly onto the narrow ledge beside me.

He unclipped his harness and knelt beside me. The blinding light of the chopper illuminated his face. He possessed sharp, aristocratic features, silver hair at his temples, and eyes that were a striking, piercing, icy blue.

I didn’t recognize him. But he recognized me.

It was Adrian Cross, the legendary, ruthless billionaire CEO of Cross Atlantic Insurance—the very company holding my life insurance policy.

Adrian looked at my broken, bleeding face. He looked at my swollen belly. The cold, calculating demeanor of a corporate titan instantly crumbled, replaced by an expression of profound, earth-shattering emotion. Tears sprang to his icy blue eyes.

He reached out, his gloved hand trembling as he gently touched my bruised, freezing cheek.

“I finally found you,” Adrian whispered, his voice cracking with a mixture of immense relief and agonizing horror. “Thirty years I’ve searched, and I find you like this.”

He was my biological father. The father my mother had hidden me from.

Adrian’s sorrow vanished in a fraction of a second, entirely replaced by a terrifying, lethal, apocalyptic rage. He looked up at the cliff where Victor had stood.

Continue to Part 2 Part 1 of 3

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