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After Buying My Ex, I Learned His Dark Secret Novel Cover

After Buying My Ex, I Learned His Dark Secret

The Pierre Hotel smelled like gardenias and old money. I stood just inside the ballroom entrance and let the scene wash over me. Crystal chandeliers threw soft light across a hundred faces I didn't recognize and a dozen I did. Women in gowns that cost more than cars. Men in tuxedos that fit like they were born wearing them. Waiters gliding between clusters of conversation with trays of champagne so pale it looked like liquid gold. Six years ago, I would have been one of those waiters. I took a glass from a passing tray and didn't drink it. My steel-gray gown was custom Valentino, fitted so precisely it felt like armor. It cost more than my entire first-year scholarship at Columbia.
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Chapter 3

The business dinner ran three hours too long.

I knew I'd had too much wine somewhere around the second bottle, when the table started feeling warmer and the conversation started feeling easier and I stopped doing the math on how much I was drinking. By the time I got into the car, the city lights were doing that soft, blurry thing they do when your edges are down.

I told myself I was fine.

I was not entirely fine.

The lobby of my building was quiet at that hour. Marble floors. Low lighting. The kind of silence that expensive buildings buy on purpose. I was almost to the elevator when I heard footsteps behind me.

"Aspyn." Marcus Hale. One of the junior partners from the dinner. He'd been pressing all evening — a hand on my elbow here, a leaning-in-too-close there. I'd deflected it six times at the table. I didn't have the patience for a seventh.

"Good night, Marcus," I said, without turning around.

"Come on." His voice had shifted. The charm was still there but something underneath it had gone hard. "One more drink. My hotel's two blocks —"

"No."

"You've been —"

"I said no."

He caught my arm.

Not hard. Just enough. Just enough to make the point that he thought he could.

The elevator doors opened.

Elias stepped out.

He took in the scene in about half a second — my arm, Marcus's hand on it, the distance between us. His face didn't change. He walked toward us at the same unhurried pace he did everything, and he stopped just close enough that Marcus had to look up at him.

"Let go of her arm," Elias said.

His voice was quiet. Completely level. The kind of quiet that isn't soft at all.

Marcus blinked. "Who are —"

"Let go of her arm. Walk out the door. Don't come back to this building." A pause. "I won't say it again."

Something in Marcus's face shifted. He looked at Elias. He looked at me. He let go.

He left.

Elias watched him go. Then he turned to me. He didn't say anything about what had just happened. He didn't ask if I was okay. He just looked at me with that steady, unhurried attention, and then he put one hand lightly at my back and guided me into the elevator.

I let him.

That was the wine. That was all that was.

In the elevator, I leaned against the wall and looked at the ceiling. The floor numbers climbed. Elias stood beside me, not touching me, not talking.

"I had it handled," I said.

"I know," he said.

We rode the rest of the way up in silence.

At the penthouse door, my heels caught on the threshold — just a stumble, barely anything — and his arm came around my waist before I'd even registered losing my balance. He walked me to my bedroom door and stopped there.

"Sleep," he said. Quietly. Like it was the simplest thing in the world.

I went inside and closed the door and stood in the dark for a moment, my heart doing something I didn't want to name.

---

I woke up to the smell of coffee.

Not the automatic-drip kind. The real kind. The kind that takes effort.

I pulled on a robe and padded down the hall, still half-asleep, following the smell the way you follow something without deciding to. I stopped in the doorway of the kitchen.

Elias was at the counter, his back to me. Morning light came through the windows at a low angle and caught the steam rising from the French press. He was pouring slowly, carefully, the way you do when you're not in a hurry and don't need to be.

Two cups. Both the same mug I always used — the plain white one, no handle on the left side where it had chipped. He'd found it in the back of the cabinet.

He hadn't heard me yet. I watched him add exactly the right amount of cream to one cup. No sugar. He didn't measure it. He just knew.

I had never told him how I took my coffee.

He turned around and saw me in the doorway. He didn't startle. He just held out the cup.

"Morning," he said.

I took the coffee. I looked down at it. Cream, no sugar. Exactly right.

"I didn't tell you how I take it," I said.

"No," he agreed.

I stood there holding the cup and the morning light was very quiet and the city outside was just starting to wake up and something in my chest did a slow, dangerous thing that I didn't have a name for yet.

"I have calls at eight," I said.

"Okay."

I went back to my room to get dressed.

I sat on the edge of my bed for a moment before I did anything else. Just sat there. The coffee was warm in my hands. Outside, a pigeon landed on the window ledge and then left again.

I told myself it was just coffee.

---

That evening he made beef Wellington.

I was standing in the kitchen doorway watching him plate it — the pastry golden and even, the knife going through it cleanly — when the memory hit me without warning.

Thanksgiving. Six years ago. His off-campus apartment on 114th Street, the one with the radiator that clanged all night and the window that didn't quite close. He had called me three days before and announced, with complete confidence, that he was going to cook Thanksgiving dinner.

I had asked if he knew how to cook.

He had said, "How hard can it be?"

The smoke alarm went off at two in the afternoon. I could hear it through the phone. Then I heard him swearing. Then silence. Then: "Don't panic."

I panicked.

By the time I got there, the turkey was a lost cause and he had burns on both hands from grabbing the oven rack without mitts — twice, because apparently the first time hadn't taught him anything. The apartment smelled like charcoal. He was sitting on the kitchen floor looking at his hands with an expression of genuine betrayal, like the oven had done this to him personally.

I laughed so hard I had to sit down on the floor next to him.

We ate cereal for Thanksgiving dinner. I held his bandaged hands in the ER waiting room and he kept apologizing and I kept laughing and at some point the laughing turned into something quieter and he looked at me and said, "Next year I'll get it right."

He hadn't gotten the chance.

I looked at him now — this man who moved through my kitchen like he'd always belonged in it, who made beef Wellington like it was nothing, who had spent six years somewhere learning how to do this — and the weight of that contrast settled over me like something I couldn't shrug off.

He looked up and caught me staring.

I looked away first.

"Sit down," he said. The same quiet way he always said it.

I sat down.

I didn't say anything about the Wellington. I didn't say anything about the coffee that morning, or the lobby the night before, or the six years that sat between us like a country neither of us had named yet.

I just picked up my fork.

And he sat across from me, and we ate, and the city hummed outside, and I kept my eyes on my plate because I didn't trust what my face might do if I looked at him for too long.

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