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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 4

It started with a dish.

He was passing me the salt and our fingers touched — just for a second, just the tips — and neither of us moved. The salt shaker sat between our hands and the kitchen was very quiet and I was suddenly aware of every inch of space between us and every inch that wasn't space at all.

I took the salt. I looked at my plate.

But I felt him looking at me.

That was the thing I couldn't get used to. The way he looked at me when he thought I wasn't paying attention. Not hungry. Not calculating. Just — careful. Like he was checking something. Like he had a picture of me somewhere in his head and he was holding it up against the real thing, making sure they still matched.

It made me feel seen in a way I hadn't been prepared for.

I didn't like it. I told myself I didn't like it.

---

The conversation started the way dangerous ones always do — sideways, about nothing.

We were on the couch after dinner, which was already a departure from my rules. I had a glass of wine. He had one too. The city was doing its nighttime thing outside the windows, all amber and movement, and I had made the mistake of asking him something small — something about a restaurant we used to go to on Amsterdam Avenue, whether it was still there — and then we were talking.

Really talking. The kind that doesn't have an agenda.

He told me the restaurant had closed. He'd walked past it once, he said. The windows were papered over. He said it the way you say something when you've been carrying it for a while and finally found somewhere to put it down.

I looked at my wine glass. "I used to get the same thing every time," I said. "The pasta with the lemon sauce."

"I know," he said. "You always stole the bread from my side of the table first."

I laughed before I could stop myself. It came out small and real and I felt it in my chest like something cracking open.

He was watching me when I laughed. That careful, quiet way.

"Aspyn," he said.

Just my name. That was all.

But the way he said it — low and steady, like he'd been holding it in his mouth for years — undid something in me that I had spent a very long time keeping tied.

I don't know which one of us moved first. I don't think it matters. What I remember is the wine glass on the coffee table and his hand on my face and the way everything I had built — every wall, every rule, every careful distance — went quiet all at once.

For a little while, I let it.

---

I woke up at five-fifteen.

The room was gray and still. His breathing was slow and even beside me. I lay there for exactly thirty seconds, staring at the ceiling, and then I got up.

I moved quietly. Efficiently. I found my clothes in the dark. I did not look at him.

In the bathroom I ran cold water over my wrists and looked at myself in the mirror for a long time. My face looked the same. That felt wrong somehow. Like something this significant should leave a mark.

I thought about the way he'd said my name.

I turned off the water.

By six I was dressed. By six-fifteen I had my bag and my laptop and my coffee — made fast, made alone, the way I used to make it before any of this — and I was in the elevator going down.

I did not leave a note.

---

My eight o'clock was a call with a fund manager in Zurich who talked too much and listened too little. I sat in my corner office on the forty-second floor and looked out at the city and said the right things at the right times and felt absolutely nothing.

Dominic knocked at nine and left a message on my desk. I didn't read it.

At nine-forty my phone buzzed with a photo from the penthouse security feed — not an alert, just a timestamp log I'd set up months ago. Force of habit. I almost didn't look.

I looked.

Elias was in the kitchen. He was making breakfast. Eggs, it looked like. Toast. He moved the same way he always did — unhurried, deliberate, like he had nowhere else to be and had decided that was fine.

He set a plate on the counter. Covered it with a second plate to keep it warm.

Then he put a piece of paper on top.

I closed the security feed.

I opened it again.

The paper was too small to read on the camera. I sat there for a moment, which was stupid, and then I called Dominic.

"The note on the kitchen counter," I said. "What does it say?"

A pause. "I'll check, Ms. Ford."

I waited. Outside, a cloud moved across the sun and the office went briefly gray.

"It says," Dominic said carefully, "'7:42. You'll miss the elevator if you leave after that.' And then — that's it. That's all it says."

I sat with that for a moment.

"Thank you," I said. "That's all."

I hung up.

I pulled up my calendar. My eight o'clock had started at eight. I had left the penthouse at six-fifteen. I had been sitting in this office for nearly two hours before my first meeting, doing nothing except not thinking about last night.

He had known I was already gone. He made the breakfast anyway. He left the note anyway.

Not for me to see before I left. Just — to leave.

I picked up my pen. I put it down.

I thought about the restaurant on Amsterdam Avenue with the papered-over windows. I thought about lemon pasta and stolen bread and a laugh I hadn't meant to let out.

I thought about thirty seconds of ceiling and then running.

I pulled the Zurich call notes toward me and I read the same line four times without taking any of it in.

At noon, I called Dominic and told him to clear my afternoon.

I didn't go home.

But I thought about it. That was the problem. I thought about it the whole rest of the day.

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