
After My Ex Called Me His Property, My Husband Struck Back
Chapter 1
The champagne in my glass was vintage Dom Pérignon, crisp and biting against my tongue, but the air in the ballroom tasted stale. It was the specific staleness of old money and desperate ambition mixing under the heat of a thousand crystal chandeliers. The Starlight Charity Gala was in full swing, a sea of black tuxedos and designer gowns swirling through the cavernous hall of the Pierre Hotel.
I stood near the periphery, away from the frenetic energy of the dance floor. My fingers idly traced the rim of the flute. I wasn't hiding, exactly. I was observing. Three years ago, crowds like this would have made my heart hammer against my ribs like a trapped bird. Now, I just felt a quiet, observant calm. I adjusted the silk of my gown—a deep midnight blue that Adrian had selected because he said it matched the quiet storm in my eyes.
"Excuse me, miss?"
A waiter drifted by with a tray of hors d'oeuvres. I waved him off with a small smile. My gaze drifted toward the grand entrance. Adrian was delayed in a board meeting—a hostile takeover that required his shark-like precision—but he’d promised to be here by the speeches. Until then, I was content to be a spectator in the world I now ruled from the shadows.
Then, the atmosphere shifted. Not the room itself, but the air around me. It grew colder, sharper.
"I didn't think they let just anyone in here these days."
The voice was a ghost. A phantom frequency I hadn't heard in three years, yet it scraped against my spine with familiar, jagged edges. My grip on the champagne flute tightened until my knuckles turned white, but I didn't turn around immediately. I took a breath, holding it in my chest, letting the initial shock curdle into something steelier.
I turned slowly.
Parker Webb stood there. He looked older, though not wiser. His tuxedo was expensive, likely Italian, but it fit him with the slightly aggressive tightness of a man trying too hard to project power. He held a glass of what looked like the house sparkling wine—the cheap stuff they served near the entrance—and his lips were curled in that smirk I once mistook for charm.
"Parker," I said. My voice was steady, devoid of the tremor he was undoubtedly expecting. "I heard you were back in the city."
He stepped closer, invading my personal space with the arrogance of a man who believes he owns the room. His eyes raked over me, assessing, calculating. He lingered on my neck, my bare shoulders, and finally, my left hand. I wore only a simple platinum band tonight—Adrian’s preference for understated security when he wasn't around.
Parker let out a short, derisive laugh. "Still playing the innocent waif, Emma? I see you managed to sneak past security. What is it tonight? Hunting for a sponsor? A sugar daddy to pay the rent on whatever shoebox you're living in?"
The audacity was breathtaking. It was almost impressive how completely he had misread the situation. He saw a woman alone at a gala and assumed desperation. He didn't see the posture, the fabric of the dress, the quiet confidence.
"I'm here for the charity, Parker," I replied, my tone cooling to absolute zero. "Something you might not be familiar with."
He stepped in, blocking my path to the main floor, corralling me toward a semi-private alcove near the terrace doors. It was a power move. He wanted me cornered. He wanted me small.
"Don't play coy with me, Em," he sneered, leaning in. The smell of his cologne—too musky, too strong—assaulted my senses. "I know it's been hard. Vivian told me how you… spiraled. Look, I’m a generous guy. I can forgive you for letting yourself go."
I stared at him, genuinely baffled. *Letting myself go?* I was in the best shape of my life. My skin glowed with the care of the city's best dermatologists. My mind was sharp.
"Forgive me?" I repeated, the words tasting like ash.
"I'm offering you a lifeline," he whispered, dropping his voice to a conspiratorial low. "Five thousand a month. Cash. I'll set you up in a decent apartment in Queens. You’re not wife material anymore, obviously—too much baggage—but you were always… eager. You still have use."
The world seemed to narrow down to his smug, oblivious face. The insult wasn't just the proposition; it was the assumption that I was a commodity to be bought, a broken thing to be rented. The old Emma might have thrown the drink in his face. The new Emma knew that stains were messy, and indifference was far more lethal.
I took a slow sip of my Dom Pérignon, letting the silence stretch until he started to fidget.
"Parker," I said softly, leaning in just enough to make him think he’d won. "My husband pays more in taxes in a single second than you make in a fiscal year."
His smirk faltered. Confusion clouded his eyes.
"Husband?" He scoffed, shaking his head as if shaking off a gnat. "Please. Who would marry you? Stop bluffing, Emma. It’s pathetic."
"Enjoy the house wine," I said, stepping around him with the grace of a queen dismissing a jester. I didn't look back.
***
The penthouse was quiet when I returned, save for the hum of the city far below. The panoramic view of Central Park was a tapestry of darkness and light. I found Adrian in his study. The room was lined with mahogany and smelled of old paper and expensive scotch.
He was seated behind his massive desk, reviewing a stack of acquisition files, the blue light of his tablet illuminating the sharp angles of his face. He looked up the moment I entered, his dark eyes instantly softening.
"You're early," he said, his voice a deep rumble that vibrated in my chest. "The speeches were boring?"
"Predictable," I lied smoothly. I walked over and sat on the edge of his desk. I didn't mention Parker. I didn't want his name to dirty the air of our sanctuary. Adrian reached out, his large hand covering mine, his thumb stroking the simple platinum band on my finger.
He didn't ask what was wrong. He didn't have to. I saw the slight tightening of his jaw, the predatory flicker in his eyes. His security detail. They must have already reported the interaction.
Adrian stood up, closing the file on his desk with a definitive *thud*. He pulled me into him, burying his face in the crook of my neck. His arms were a fortress, solid and impenetrable.
"Go check on Oliver," he murmured against my skin, kissing my forehead with a tenderness that belied the danger radiating from him. "I have one last call to make."
I nodded and slipped out of the room. As I walked down the hall toward the nursery, I heard Adrian’s voice shift. The tenderness evaporated, replaced by the cold, ruthless tone of the man who brought Wall Street to its knees.
"Get Legal on the line," I heard him say, his voice low and lethal. "I want Webb International monitored. Every transaction. Every breath. If he sneezes, I want to know about it."
I smiled into the darkness. Parker Webb thought he was hunting a rabbit. He had no idea he had just walked into the lion's den.
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