
After My Husband Gave Away Our Penthouse to His First Love
Chapter 1
The wind off the Hudson River was sharp, biting through my wool coat. I stood on the pavement across the street, staring up at the Manhattan penthouse. The building had a sleek, imposing facade of glass and dark steel. We spent three years renovating that place. I picked out the custom velvet curtains in the living room. I flew to Italy to select the marble for the kitchen island. I treated that home like a monument to what we were building together.
Now, I looked up at those towering windows and felt nothing but a cold, heavy knot in my chest.
My phone buzzed in my gloved hand. It was an automated alert from the property management app I set up during the remodel. I swiped the notification open and blinked. The title had been transferred. Cleanly. Deliberately. The new owner was listed as Salma Gray. Declan’s college ex-girlfriend.
I didn’t cry. I didn't scream or drop my phone. I took a slow, measured breath, letting the icy air fill my lungs. I opened the voice recorder app, tapped the red button, and dialed my husband's number.
Declan arrived twelve minutes later. He stepped out of a yellow cab, his face flushed red from the cold and the panic. His designer coat was unbuttoned, flapping wildly in the wind. He marched up to me, his body language defensive, his shoulders rigid.
“Mylah,” he started, his voice too loud for the quiet street. “What are you doing standing out here in the freezing cold?”
“Just looking at the penthouse,” I said smoothly. I kept my hands in my pockets. “The one you gave away.”
His jaw tightened. He ran a hand through his hair, a nervous habit he always had when backed into a corner. “Listen, Salma has no one else. You don't understand the situation.”
I kept my phone in my pocket, the red light blinking silently in the dark fabric. “I don't?”
“No, you don't,” he insisted. His voice pitched higher, laced with that familiar, patronizing edge. “She's in trouble. I didn't have a choice, Mylah. You have to understand.”
He stepped closer, trying to grab my arm. I took a half-step back.
“You have to understand,” he repeated, desperate to make his reality mine. “It's just a temporary measure. To protect her assets. She’s entirely alone.”
“You gave her our home,” I said quietly.
“I didn't have a choice!” he snapped, his face contorting. “You have your family. You have a massive trust fund. You have everything. She has nothing. You have to understand that.”
I let him talk. I let his pathetic excuses and misplaced savior complex fill the freezing air between us. When his chest finally stopped heaving, I looked him dead in the eye.
“I want a divorce,” I said. I used the exact same flat, calm tone I used to order my black coffee every morning.
The color drained from his face instantly. He looked like I had slapped him. “What? Mylah, be reasonable—”
I turned on my heel and walked away. I didn't look back. I heard him shout my name. I heard his heavy footsteps slapping against the concrete as he scrambled to follow me.
“Mylah, wait!” he yelled. He darted toward his parked SUV down the block. I kept walking, my pace steady.
Two blocks later, the sharp screech of tires echoed down the avenue. It was followed by the sickening, hollow crunch of metal wrapping around concrete. I stopped. I didn't run back. I just stood there for a moment, listening to the distant blare of a car horn.
An hour later, my phone rang. It was the ER at Mount Sinai. Declan had run a red light and wrapped his car around a traffic pole. Fractured collarbone, mild concussion. I paused for a beat, thanked the nurse, and hailed a cab. I wasn't going out of tenderness. I was going because I knew exactly what a man like Declan did when he was injured, medicated, and frightened.
He talked.
The hospital room smelled of harsh antiseptic and stale linen. The heart monitor beeped in a steady, annoying rhythm. Declan lay on the narrow bed, hooked up to an IV. A heavy brace held his shoulder in place. His eyes were half-closed, glassy and unfocused from the painkillers.
I sat in the plastic visitor's chair beside him. My phone was nestled deep in my coat pocket, the recorder already running.
“Mylah,” he mumbled, turning his head slowly toward me. “You came.”
“I'm here,” I said softly. I leaned forward, resting my elbows on my knees. “How are you feeling?”
“Hurts,” he groaned. Then his brow furrowed, a childlike confusion washing over his face. “Are you still mad? About the apartment?”
I kept my face perfectly unreadable. “Tell me about Salma, Declan.”
He sighed, a long, rattling breath. The medication loosened his tongue just like I knew it would. “She's been through so much,” he whispered, staring at the ceiling. “She has no one. Her debts... they were going to hurt her, Mylah. The penthouse was just collateral.”
“Debts?” I asked gently. “How much did she need?”
“A lot,” he slurred. “I had to help her. I had to. I'm the only one who cares about her. The only one who really sees her.”
I sat there for forty minutes. I asked soft, open-ended questions. I fed his delusion with gentle nudges, never raising my voice, never showing a hint of anger. He gave me dates. He gave me amounts. He gave me the names of shell companies. By the time his eyes finally rolled shut in a drug-induced sleep, I had everything I needed.
I left the hospital and went straight back to my own apartment. I didn't even take off my coat before I made the call. I dialed Victor Hale. Victor was my family's longtime forensic accountant and fixer. He was a discreet, ruthless financial investigator who didn't ask stupid questions.
“Victor,” I said when he answered. “I need a full audit on every account connected to Declan's business operations. Every single one.”
“How fast?” Victor asked, his voice gravelly.
“Yesterday.”
It took him exactly seventy-two hours. When the encrypted file hit my inbox, I was sitting at my kitchen table with a mug of black coffee. I opened the report. The numbers stared back at me in stark, undeniable black and white.
Declan didn't just give away the penthouse. He had embezzled eight million dollars from our jointly connected business accounts. He disguised the transfers as operational expenses and vendor payouts over the last eight months. But Victor traced every single dollar. It all led straight to Salma Gray.
I took a slow sip of my coffee. The heat burned the back of my throat, but it grounded me. I didn't feel heartbroken. I didn't feel the urge to scream or throw my mug at the wall. I felt a dangerous, quiet clarity settling over my bones.
I opened a new document on my laptop. I stared at the blinking cursor for a second. Then, I typed a single word at the top of the blank page: *Assets*.
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