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After Meeting His Ex, I Knew He’d Never Love Me Novel Cover

After Meeting His Ex, I Knew He’d Never Love Me

The music in the ballroom was too loud. The champagne was too dry. I just wanted to take off my heels and go home. My feet throbbed badly. I had spent six hours in the dance studio that morning. I stood near a melting ice sculpture, trying to hide in the shadows. That’s when Marcus Hale found me. He was an entertainment executive with too much cologne and a reputation for wandering hands. He boxed me in against the cocktail table. “Waverly,” he purred.
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Chapter 4

The ride home from the restaurant was completely silent. Jolene’s perfume still seemed to cling to the air inside the black town car. When we finally walked into the penthouse, Fletcher went straight to the bar. He poured two fingers of scotch. The ice clinked sharply against the crystal.

I stood by the kitchen island, still wearing my black silk dress. I watched his back. The broad, stiff line of his shoulders under his tailored suit.

“What was it like?” I asked. My voice sounded too loud in the cavernous room.

He didn't turn around right away. He took a slow sip of his drink. “What was what like?”

“Your marriage. Before it ended.”

He finally turned. His face was a mask of perfect, polite blankness. “It was a long time ago, Waverly. It's over. Nolan is what matters now.”

He wasn't mean. He was just sealed tight. A vault with a lost combination.

I took a step closer. The marble floor was freezing against my bare feet. “I'm not asking about the end,” I said softly. “Were you happy?”

Fletcher stared at me. The silence stretched. It filled the space between us, heavy and suffocating. I watched his throat work as he swallowed. I watched a tiny muscle feather in his jaw.

“I thought I was,” he finally said. His voice was scraped hollow.

He didn't offer anything else. He didn't cross the room to hold me. I nodded slowly. I didn't ask another question.

It was Tuesday night. The digital clock on the bedside table read 2:14 a.m. The sheets on Fletcher's side of the bed were perfectly smooth. Cold. Down the hall, a thin sliver of yellow light bled from under the study door. He was still working.

I lay on my back, staring at the dark ceiling. My chest felt tight. Jolene's knowing smile flashed behind my eyelids every time I blinked.

I rolled over and grabbed my phone. The screen glowed harshly in the dark. My thumb hovered over the search bar. I typed her name. *Jolene Hawkins.*

Her profile was public. Of course it was. It was a museum, perfectly curated and polished. I took a shallow breath and tapped the first photo grid.

I scrolled back. Past the recent trips to Paris. Past the solo shots in designer coats. I scrolled deep into the past. Down to the years before the divorce.

My thumb stopped. The breath punched out of my lungs.

It was a photo of Fletcher. He looked younger. His hair was a little longer, a little messier. He was wearing a faded apron over a t-shirt. His hands were covered in white flour. He was laughing. A real, wide, unguarded laugh that reached all the way to his crinkling gray eyes.

The caption read: *My man cooked every dish from 6 a.m. Happy Thanksgiving!*

I stared at the screen. My pulse pounded in my ears. Fletcher didn't cook. He ordered in from five-star restaurants. He had a private chef on speed dial.

I swallowed hard and scrolled to the next post.

It was a video. The camera was shaky. It showed Fletcher in a sunlit living room. He had his arms wrapped tight around Jolene’s waist. Her head rested on his chest. They were swaying slowly. There was no music playing in the background. Just the sound of their breathing and Fletcher humming softly against her hair.

*No music needed,* the caption said.

My hands started to shake. I couldn't stop. I tapped another picture.

It was a close-up of an open suitcase. Tucked between neatly folded shirts were three handwritten letters. The ink was dark and bold. Fletcher's handwriting.

*Found these after he left for Tokyo. I married the last romantic man alive.*

Fletcher sent me texts. *Sleep well, Waverly.* *Track 42 has the tempo you want.* He never wrote me letters.

I kept scrolling. I felt sick to my stomach, but I couldn't look away. Wedding photos. Fletcher standing in a florist's shop, pointing at different white roses, his brow furrowed in deep concentration. He was comparing floral arrangements with the intensity of a man solving a complex math problem. He wanted it to be perfect. For her.

Eleven years. Eleven years of a man who loved without a single wall up. A man who gave everything. He wasn't incapable of passion. He wasn't naturally distant. He had just spent it all on her.

I dropped the phone on the mattress. My chest heaved. The tears didn't come, just a dry, aching burn in the back of my throat. I wasn't his great love. I was the safe harbor he docked at after the storm destroyed his real home.

I grabbed my phone and slipped out of bed. I walked into the guest bathroom and locked the door. I sat on the edge of the cold porcelain tub and dialed Annika's number.

She answered on the third ring. Her voice was thick with sleep. “Wav? What's wrong? What time is it?”

“Three a.m.,” I whispered. My voice shook. “I looked, Anni. I looked at her Instagram.”

I heard the rustle of sheets as she sat up. “Oh, honey. Why did you do that?”

I told her everything. The words spilled out of me in a frantic rush. The flour on his hands. The slow dancing in silence. The handwritten letters tucked into suitcases. The agonizing contrast between the man on that screen and the man sitting in the study down the hall.

“He's capable of it,” I choked out. “He knows how to love like that. He just doesn't want to love me like that.”

Annika didn't interrupt. She let me cry. She let the silence settle over the line.

Then, she sighed softly. “Waverly,” she said. Her tone was gentle, but sharp. “Is this about what he's not giving you? Or is this about what he gave someone else?”

I opened my mouth to answer. Nothing came out. I squeezed my eyes shut. It was a brutal tug-of-war in my own head. I wanted the passion. I deserved the passion. But I also hated that she got it first. I hated that she emptied him out and left me with the scraps.

“I don't know,” I whispered.

I hung up the phone. I crept back into the bedroom and slid under the cold covers. I lay stiffly on my side, facing the window. The city lights blurred in my vision.

At 4 a.m., the study door finally clicked shut. Footsteps moved quietly down the hall. The mattress dipped behind me. Fletcher slid into bed. He moved carefully, trying not to wake me.

He leaned over. His lips pressed gently against my bare shoulder. It was a fleeting, feather-light kiss. So tender. So perfectly contained. So incredibly safe.

A single tear slipped hot and fast down my cheek. It soaked into the pillowcase. That tiny, careful kiss broke something deep inside me. I finally knew the name of it. It was my hope.

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