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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 5

The gala was at the Met this time. Different venue, same architecture of wealth — the kind of event where the champagne is always cold and the conversations are always warm and nothing anyone says is entirely true.

I was working the room the way I always did. Handshakes. Eye contact. The right amount of smile. I had three conversations going simultaneously in my head — the Singapore acquisition, the board call on Thursday, the fund manager in Zurich who still talked too much — and I was managing all of them while appearing to be fully present in none of them, which is a skill that takes years to build and feels like nothing once you have it.

Then I heard my name.

Not the professional version. The real one. The one that meant someone actually knew me.

"Aspyn Ford." A hand on my arm. "You look like you're calculating someone's net worth."

I turned around.

Makenna Cruz was standing there in a green dress, champagne in hand, grinning at me like six years was nothing. Like we'd seen each other last Tuesday.

Something in my chest loosened before I could stop it.

"Makenna."

"Don't you dare do the professional handshake," she said, and pulled me into a hug.

I let her. I even hugged back.

We found a quieter corner near the east gallery, away from the main floor, where the noise dropped to a manageable hum. She looked the same. A little sharper around the eyes, maybe. The kind of sharp that comes from paying attention for a long time.

"I heard you were back," she said. "I heard you bought a penthouse. I heard you bought a man."

"News travels."

"It's New York." She tilted her glass. "How are you? Actually."

"Fine."

"Aspyn."

"I'm fine, Makenna."

She looked at me for a moment. Then she let it go, the way old friends do when they know the door is closed but also know it won't stay closed forever.

We talked. Really talked, the way I hadn't in longer than I wanted to admit. She told me about her firm, a boutique PR agency she'd built from two clients and a shared office in Midtown. I told her about the Singapore deal in broad strokes. She asked about the penthouse. I told her about the view.

Neither of us said his name for a while.

Then she said it.

Casually. The way you mention something you assume the other person already knows.

"It's funny, running into you now," she said. "I was just thinking about Elias the other day. Someone at a dinner was talking about his tech venture — the valuation just crossed eight billion, apparently." She shook her head, almost admiringly. "Wild, right? The way he just walked away from all of it and built something bigger on his own."

I didn't move.

"Walked away," I said.

"From the Hawkins empire, yeah." She glanced at me. "I mean, you knew that, right? That he left voluntarily? He didn't go bankrupt — that was just the story that got around for a while. He just — left. Cut ties completely." A small shrug. "I always thought that was kind of remarkable, honestly. Giving up that much."

The champagne in my hand was very cold.

"Right," I said.

Makenna was still talking. Something about the tech sector, about a mutual acquaintance who'd invested early. I heard the words. I processed none of them.

Eight billion.

He was richer than me.

He had always been richer than me.

He had stood in my kitchen and made short ribs and asked what time I preferred dinner and carried one bag into my guest room like a man with nothing — and the whole time, the whole time —

"Aspyn?" Makenna was looking at me. "You okay?"

"Fine," I said. "Sorry. The Singapore thing. I just remembered something."

She accepted this. She was too good a friend not to, and too smart not to know I was lying.

We stayed another twenty minutes. I said the right things. I smiled at the right moments. When we hugged goodbye she held on a second longer than necessary and said, "Call me. Actually call me."

"I will," I said.

I walked to the coat check. I got my coat. I got into the car.

My phone buzzed before we'd made it two blocks.

Dominic. A forwarded message, flagged urgent. Below it, four photos.

I opened them.

A café in the West Village. Corner table. Afternoon light. Elias in a dark jacket, leaning forward. And across from him — close, close enough that the angle made it look like a secret — Paulina Ward. Her hand on his forearm. Her face tilted toward his. His head bent down toward hers.

I looked at the photos for a long time.

The car moved through traffic. Someone outside was selling flowers from a cart on the corner. The light turned red.

I put my phone face-down on the seat.

I looked out the window.

Here is what I knew: I had paid three million dollars. I had let him into my home. I had let him make me coffee and dinner and I had laughed at something he said about a restaurant that didn't exist anymore and I had let him say my name in that quiet, careful way and I had —

I had let him in.

I, who had spent six years making sure no one could get in. I, who had built an entire empire out of the wreckage of the last time I trusted him. I, who knew better — who had always known better, who had told myself every single day that I was doing this for control, for revenge, for the satisfaction of watching him carry my dry cleaning —

I had let him in anyway.

And he had been laughing at me the whole time. Him and Paulina both. The same way they had laughed six years ago, probably. The same trap. The same bait. Just updated for the woman I'd become — because the girl I used to be was too broke to be worth the effort, but the CEO was a different story.

The light turned green.

I picked up my phone. I looked at the photos one more time. Paulina's hand on his arm. The lean of his body toward hers.

I thought about the note on the kitchen counter. Seven forty-two. You'll miss the elevator.

I thought about the coffee. Cream, no sugar. Exactly right.

I thought about how I had sat on the edge of my bed that morning and told myself it was just coffee.

The humiliation moved through me like something physical. Hot and slow and total.

Not like six years ago. Six years ago I had been blindsided. I had been twenty-one and in love and I hadn't seen it coming.

This time I had walked in with my eyes open. I had written the check myself. I had sat across from him at my own table and eaten the food he made and felt something thaw in my chest and called it dangerous and done it anyway.

This time I had chosen it.

That was the part I couldn't get past. That was the part that sat in my sternum like a coal.

I turned my phone back over. I opened my calendar.

I had a board call Thursday. The Singapore close was next week. I had a dinner with the Meridian partners on Friday that I'd been putting off for a month.

I had a man in my penthouse who had spent three weeks making me believe he was something he wasn't.

I stared at the calendar.

Then I opened a new window. I pulled up the Hawkins Industries portfolio. I pulled up Paulina Ward's fashion label — the one she'd been building for three years, the one that had just closed a Series B.

I looked at the numbers for a long time.

The car pulled up to my building. The doorman opened the door. I stepped out into the cold air and stood on the sidewalk for a moment, the city moving around me, and I felt something settle into place inside me like a lock turning over.

Not grief. Not heartbreak.

Something colder than both.

I went upstairs. The penthouse smelled like whatever he'd made for dinner. The table was set. There was a glass of wine poured at my place, the right kind, the right temperature.

Elias came out of the kitchen when he heard the elevator. He looked at me the way he always did — that quiet, careful attention.

"You're late," he said. Not an accusation. Just a fact.

"I ran into someone," I said.

I set my bag down. I took off my coat. I sat down at the table and picked up the wine glass and looked at him across the room.

"It smells good," I said. "What did you make?"

He told me. I listened. I smiled at the right moment.

I was very good at this. I had always been very good at this.

I picked up my fork and I ate the dinner he had made me and I asked him about his day and I laughed once at something he said and I watched his face do that thing — that careful, quiet thing — and I filed it away.

Every detail. Every tell.

I was going to need all of it.

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