
After My Ex Destroyed My Life, He Begged
Chapter 1
The afternoon light hit Manhattan like a slap—bright, sharp, unforgiving. I walked Danny home from his Thursday session at the therapy center, his hand warm and loose in mine. He was in a good mood. That meant he was loud.
"Josie, look!" He yanked free before I could tighten my grip. "Bird!"
He lunged toward the pigeon on the sidewalk, arm swinging wide, and I heard it before I saw it—a long, ugly scrape of fingernails against metal. My stomach dropped.
The scratch ran nearly two feet down the side of a matte-black sports car parked at the curb. Custom paint. No chrome. The kind of car that cost more than our apartment building.
"Danny." My voice came out flat. Controlled. "Come here."
He turned around, face wide open and innocent. "The bird flew away."
"I know, buddy." I pulled him gently behind me, my eyes already fixed on the damage. My chest was tight. I was already doing the math, the terrible, useless math, when the driver's door swung open.
I looked up.
Five years. Five years, and I still knew his shoulders before I knew his face. The way he held himself—like the world owed him room.
Greyson Scott stepped out onto the sidewalk.
He was taller than I remembered. Or maybe I had just gotten smaller. His suit was dark and perfect. His jaw was harder. There were no traces left of the broke Columbia kid who used to fall asleep over his laptop at 2 a.m. while I refilled his coffee. This man had been carved from something colder.
His eyes moved to the scratch first. Then to Danny. Then to me.
I watched the exact moment he recognized me. His expression didn't explode. It shifted. Slowly. Like a door swinging open onto a very dark room.
"Josie Greene." His voice was low. Almost quiet.
My hands found Danny's shoulders. "I'm sorry about the car. It was an accident. I'll cover the repair costs."
"Will you." It wasn't a question.
"Yes. If you give me a few weeks—"
"Fifteen thousand dollars." He said it the way you'd say the time. Flat. Final. "That's the cost of a custom respray on this model. I want it in full."
The number hit me like cold water. "That's—" I stopped myself. I pressed my fists into my coat pockets. "That's not a reasonable estimate for a scratch."
"Take it up with my lawyer." He pulled out his phone. "Name and number."
"Greyson." The name felt strange in my mouth after so long. "We can talk about this like—"
"Like what?" His eyes came up. Sharp. "Like old friends?" A short, humorless sound. "You don't get to play that card. Not after what you did."
I went still. "What I did."
"You know exactly what I'm talking about." His voice dropped another register. "The source code. The wire transfer. The way you walked out without a single word." He tilted his head. "Did you spend it all already? Is that why you're working a restaurant job?"
The words landed like something physical. I felt Danny shift behind me, confused by the tension he couldn't name.
"I never sold anything," I said. My voice was steady. I made sure of it. "I don't know what you were told, but it wasn't the truth."
He looked at me for a long moment. His eyes were granite. There was nothing left in them that I recognized.
"Name and number," he said again.
I gave them to him. What else could I do.
He typed without looking up, got back in the car, and drove away. No second glance. No hesitation. Just gone.
I stood on the sidewalk with Danny's hand in mine and watched the car disappear around the corner. The city kept moving around us. Taxis. Voices. Someone's music from a third-floor window. The world had no interest in what had just happened to me.
"Josie?" Danny tugged my hand. "Are you sad?"
"No, buddy." I squeezed his fingers. "I'm fine."
The legal notice arrived at our apartment before I even finished my shift. Messengered. Formal letterhead. Compounding interest clause.
I sat in the bistro break room afterward, the paper folded on the table in front of me, my apron still tied around my waist. The numbers blurred. I kept thinking about Danny's next care payment. About Mom's surgery fund. About how close we were to zero.
I didn't hear Dawson come in. I only noticed him when the warmth of his coat settled over my shoulders—his bespoke charcoal wool, still carrying the faint smell of cedar. He didn't say a word. Just left it there and walked back toward the kitchen.
I stared at the legal notice and said nothing.
Outside, the city hummed on, indifferent and bright. And somewhere in it, Greyson Scott was already deciding what came next.
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