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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 2

I started with the catering company.

Not because I expected to find anything. Because I needed to do something with my hands that wasn't rearranging objects on a counter at two in the morning.

I called them from my office, using the name of our event coordinator, asking about a follow-up on last night's staffing. Standard post-event protocol. The kind of call no one questions.

The manager picked up on the second ring.

"Actually," he said, and I heard the particular hesitation of someone delivering news they haven't fully processed yet, "we had a situation this morning. One of our girls didn't come in for her shift. Left a note for me at the front desk." A pause. "Handwritten. Just said she was sorry."

"No notice?"

"Nothing. Six months she worked for us. Good worker." Another pause. "You're not the first person to ask about her today."

I kept my voice even. "I see. Thank you for letting me know."

I hung up and sat very still.

No notice. A handwritten apology. Gone by morning.

People don't disappear that cleanly unless someone tells them to. Or unless they already know they need to.

I opened my laptop.

---

Wes and I had always kept our finances adjacent rather than merged — a practical arrangement for a practical engagement. But three years of shared accounts for household expenses, event budgets, and joint investments meant I had visibility into more than most fiancées would. I had never used it. I had never needed to, or told myself I didn't.

I pulled up the account statements and started scrolling back.

The payments weren't hidden. That was the first thing that stopped me. They weren't buried in shell accounts or routed through layers of corporate structure. They were just there — a line item, recurring, the first of every month, going back fourteen months. The recipient was listed as Hargrove Oncology Partners, a private cancer treatment facility in Midtown.

I wrote down the amount. I wrote down the dates.

Then I cross-referenced the facility against what I remembered from my research three years ago. Nadia Evans. Parents: father deceased, mother — I had to go back through my notes, the ones I kept in a locked folder I told myself I'd never open again — mother: Diana Lowe. Diagnosed.

I sat back in my chair.

The number on the screen was not a small number. It was the kind of number that meant private room, specialist consultations, experimental treatment protocols. The kind of number that meant someone was making sure Diana Lowe had every possible chance.

For fourteen months.

I got up and walked to the window. The city was doing what it always did — moving, indifferent, enormous — and I stood there until I felt my breathing even out.

Then I went back to the laptop.

---

The property took me longer.

I wasn't looking for it specifically. I was following a different thread — a trust entity that appeared twice in Wes's personal holdings, flagged in a quarterly review I'd signed off on without reading closely enough. I pulled the full document this time.

The trust held a single asset: a two-bedroom apartment in the West Village. One of Wes's private properties, the kind that didn't appear in corporate portfolios. The kind that existed in the quiet margin between business and personal.

The trust covered all associated costs. Maintenance. Utilities. Monthly fees.

The payments were current.

I stared at the address for a long time. I didn't recognize it. I had never been there. In three years of sharing a life with this man — or performing the shape of one — I had never had reason to go to that address, and he had never mentioned it.

I wrote it down anyway. Underneath the oncology payments. Underneath Nadia's name.

Then I looked at what I had written and felt something in my chest go very quiet.

Not loud. Not sharp. Just — quiet. The way a room goes quiet after a door closes.

I had spent three years building theories. Careful, reasonable, generous theories. He was private. He was complicated. He had a past he hadn't processed. I had told myself these things the way you tell yourself things when the alternative is too large to look at directly.

But there was nothing theoretical about a fourteen-month payment history. Nothing complicated about a deed.

Laid out in front of me, the numbers told a story I didn't need to interpret. Wes had been taking care of Nadia Evans — her housing, her mother's treatment, her entire financial stability — for over a year. While we shared a penthouse. While I smiled at three hundred people and called it a life.

While he never once touched me.

I closed the laptop.

I straightened the pen on my desk. The notepad. The small glass paperweight Sky had given me two birthdays ago, the one that caught the light and threw small rainbows across the wall when the afternoon sun hit it right.

I lined them up. Moved them back.

The thing about being good at research is that you can't unknow what you find. You can decide what to do with it. You can choose your next move with precision and care. But you cannot put the information back in the dark and pretend you didn't go looking.

I had gone looking.

I picked up my phone. Set it down. Picked it up again.

Wes's name sat at the top of my recent calls, the way it always did. Three years of being each other's first contact, last contact, the name that appeared most often in the log.

I thought about Nadia on her knees on the rooftop tile. I thought about his face — that white, gone-somewhere-else face — and the way he had walked out without looking back.

I thought about the empty bowl where his keys should have been.

I dialed.

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