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After My Groom Helped His Ex Fight Cancer Novel Cover

After My Groom Helped His Ex Fight Cancer

The champagne tower was my idea. Three tiers of crystal flutes, backlit in warm gold, positioned at the center of the rooftop so that every guest who stepped off the elevator would see it first. A statement. A signal. Tonight, everything is exactly as it should be. I stood near the east railing with a glass I hadn't touched, watching Manhattan spread out below us like something that belonged to me. Three hundred people filled the space behind me — old money and new money and the kind of money that doesn't discuss itself — all of them here because it was my birthday and because being seen at a Marshall event still meant something in this city. Twenty-eight years old. I didn't feel it. I felt the same way I always felt at these things: alert, composed, and very slightly outside my own body.
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Chapter 1

The champagne tower was my idea.

Three tiers of crystal flutes, backlit in warm gold, positioned at the center of the rooftop so that every guest who stepped off the elevator would see it first. A statement. A signal. Tonight, everything is exactly as it should be.

I stood near the east railing with a glass I hadn't touched, watching Manhattan spread out below us like something that belonged to me. Three hundred people filled the space behind me — old money and new money and the kind of money that doesn't discuss itself — all of them here because it was my birthday and because being seen at a Marshall event still meant something in this city.

Twenty-eight years old. I didn't feel it. I felt the same way I always felt at these things: alert, composed, and very slightly outside my own body.

"You're doing the thing," Wes said beside me.

I didn't look at him. "What thing?"

"The thing where you smile at everyone and look at no one."

I turned then. He was in a black suit, no tie, his jaw clean-shaved and his dark eyes doing what they always did — taking in the room with the kind of quiet attention that most people mistook for boredom. Wes Carter was never bored. He was always watching.

"It's called hosting," I said.

The corner of his mouth moved. Not quite a smile. With Wes, it never quite was.

That was the thing about us, the thing that looked like intimacy from the outside and felt like something else entirely from where I was standing. We were good together in public. Seamlessly, convincingly good. He knew when to put his hand at the small of my back. I knew when to laugh at exactly the right moment. Three years of practice had made us fluent in a language that meant nothing in private.

I had proposed to him. That part people didn't know. When my father cut me off — publicly, deliberately, in front of the family's inner circle — I had walked out of that room and called Wes Carter's office before I reached the elevator. I told him I wanted a strategic engagement. A merger of appearances. I told him it made sense for both of us.

He said yes the same afternoon.

I told myself it was business. I had been telling myself that for three years.

The string quartet shifted into something slower, and I turned back to the room. That was when I saw the waitress.

She was moving too fast, weaving between clusters of guests with a tray of champagne flutes, and she caught the edge of a chair. The tray tilted. One glass slid, and she grabbed for it, and in the scramble her elbow caught the sleeve of the man beside her — Wes.

It was nothing. A brush of contact. The kind of thing that happens at every event, that gets a quick apology and a laugh and is forgotten before the song ends.

But Wes went completely still.

I felt it before I saw it — a change in the air beside me, a drop in temperature that had nothing to do with the October wind off the river. I turned and his face was white. Not pale. White. His jaw was locked so tight I could see the muscle working beneath his cheek, and his eyes — his eyes were somewhere else entirely. Somewhere far away and very bad.

His hand shot out and closed around the waitress's wrist.

The tray hit the floor. Crystal shattered. The quartet stopped.

Three hundred people went quiet in the space of two seconds.

He forced her down. Not roughly — that was the thing that made it worse, somehow. It was controlled. Deliberate. Like a man executing a decision he had already made somewhere deep and unreachable. The girl went to her knees on the rooftop tile, her face tipped up, her eyes wide and filling fast.

I was already moving.

"Wes." My voice came out low and even. The voice I used in boardrooms when something was about to go very wrong and I needed to be the only calm thing in the room. I stepped between them and put my hand over his. "Let go."

His grip didn't loosen. His eyes didn't move to me.

"Wes." I pressed my fingers over his knuckles. "Now."

Something shifted. He blinked — once, slow — and his hand opened.

I caught the girl's arm and brought her to her feet in one motion, turning her away from the room, angling my body to block the sight line from the nearest cluster of guests. My other hand was already up, two fingers extended toward the event manager across the terrace. He was at my side in ten seconds.

"Get her some water and somewhere quiet," I said, low enough that only he heard. "And get someone to clean this up before anyone photographs it."

He moved. I turned back.

The girl was shaking. I looked at her face — really looked, for the first time — and felt the floor shift under me.

I knew her.

Not well. Not personally. But I had done my research three years ago, the way I do research on everything that matters, and I had looked at this face in photographs. Younger then. Softer. But the same dark eyes, the same sharp line of her jaw.

Nadia Evans.

Wes's college ex. The woman I had spent three years constructing elaborate theories about. The woman I had decided, quietly and without evidence, was the reason he never touched me.

She was looking at Wes. Not at me. At him. And the expression on her face was not the expression of a stranger.

Wes released her wrist — he had been holding it still, I realized, even after I'd stepped in — and took one step back. Then another. His face had gone from white to something I didn't have a word for. Something that looked like a man watching a building he thought was gone burn down in front of him.

Then he turned and walked away.

Through the crowd, past the champagne tower, to the elevator. He didn't look back. He didn't say anything. He was just gone.

I stood in the middle of my own birthday party and watched him leave.

Then I smoothed the front of my gown, picked up a fresh glass of champagne from a passing tray, and turned back to my guests with a smile that cost me more than I will ever admit.

---

The penthouse was dark when I got home.

I didn't turn on the lights. I sat at the kitchen counter and lined up the objects nearest to me — a pen, a coaster, the small ceramic bowl where Wes left his keys when he came home. I moved them into a straight line. Then I moved them back.

His keys weren't in the bowl.

I sat there until the city outside the windows went from black to the particular gray-blue that comes just before dawn, and I thought about Nadia Evans on her knees, and the look on Wes's face, and the three years of careful distance I had built an entire life around.

I didn't cry. I straightened the pen. I straightened the coaster.

I thought: I already knew. I just never let myself say it out loud.

---

Sky arrived at nine in the morning with two coffees and the expression she wore when she had been awake since before I texted her.

She set a cup in front of me, looked at my face, and sat down.

"Tell me," she said.

So I told her. All of it — the waitress, the wrist, the kneeling, the name I recognized. Wes walking out. The empty penthouse. The keys that weren't in the bowl.

Sky listened without interrupting, which was the most disciplined I had ever seen her. When I finished, she wrapped both hands around her cup and was quiet for a moment.

Then: "Three years, Jovie."

"I know."

"Three years of the most expensive, most photographed, most completely sexless engagement in Manhattan history —"

"Sky."

"— and the second his ex shows up, he loses his mind in front of three hundred people and then disappears." She looked at me steadily. "What exactly are you still protecting here?"

I opened my mouth. Closed it.

I had an answer ready. I always had an answer ready. But I sat there in the gray morning light with my coffee going cold and the ceramic bowl sitting empty on the counter, and for the first time in three years, I didn't reach for it.

The silence said everything I couldn't.

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