
Ex-Husband's Late Apology
Chapter 3
One week after I signed away my marriage, Adonis presented me with divorce papers over breakfast.
I was sitting at our dining table—my dining table now, I supposed—picking at a piece of toast I had no appetite for. The wound on my temple had scabbed over, a constant reminder every time I caught my reflection. I'd stopped sleeping in our bedroom. Couldn't bear the sight of the bed where I'd once felt safe.
Adonis walked in precisely at eight, dressed in one of his tailored Brioni suits. He set a leather portfolio on the table beside my coffee cup, the gesture as casual as if he were dropping off a business contract.
"The papers," he said. His voice was flat, businesslike. "My attorney expedited the process."
I stared at the portfolio, my fingers tightening around my toast. "You're really doing this."
"Our marriage has run its course, Trinity." He pulled out the chair across from me but didn't sit. "I've found a more profound connection with Xiomara. Surely you can see that."
A profound connection. With the woman who boiled my father's ashes. I wanted to laugh, but the sound stuck in my throat, sharp and bitter.
"The settlement is generous," he continued, flipping open the portfolio to reveal documents stamped with official seals. "The penthouse is yours. Twenty million in liquid assets. You'll want for nothing."
Money. He thought this was about money.
My hands trembled as I reached for the pen he'd placed beside the papers. "My father saved your life," I whispered. "He went blind saving you."
Something flickered across Adonis's face—guilt, maybe, or irritation at being reminded. "That was a long time ago."
"Two weeks. It's been two weeks since I buried him."
"Sign the papers, Trinity." His jaw clenched, that familiar gesture I used to find endearing. Now it just looked cruel. "Don't make this harder than it needs to be."
I signed. Each stroke of the pen felt like carving my own epitaph. Mrs. Adonis King, died at twenty-eight, killed by her husband's betrayal. When I finished, I set the pen down carefully, precisely, because if I wasn't careful, I might throw it at his face.
"I'll have my things moved out by the end of the week," he said, gathering the documents. He paused at the doorway, and for one agonizing moment, I thought he might apologize. Might show some flicker of the boy I'd loved since childhood.
But he just left.
---
Two weeks later, Cassidy dragged me to the Manhattan Charity Gala.
"You need to show your face," she insisted, zipping up my black Valentino gown with determined efficiency. "Let them see you're not hiding."
I was hiding. I'd been hiding in my penthouse, surrounded by my father's books and my own grief. But Cassidy was right—the society vultures would feast on my absence, turn it into weakness.
The Plaza ballroom glittered with Manhattan's elite, all diamonds and false smiles. I felt their stares the moment I entered, heard the whispers ripple through the crowd like poison.
Then I saw them.
Adonis stood near the auction stage, and Xiomara clung to his arm in a couture gown I recognized immediately. Elie Saab, from the spring collection. I'd seen it at Fashion Week, had even considered it for myself. The price tag had been astronomical—sixty thousand at least.
She was wearing my life.
"Breathe," Cassidy murmured beside me, her hand tight on my elbow. "Just breathe."
The auction began. I watched, numb, as Adonis bid on a sculpture I knew he hated. Xiomara had touched it, traced her fingers along its curves, and that was enough. Fifty thousand for art he'd never display.
Then came the diamond necklace.
"Exquisite piece," the auctioneer announced. "Van Cleef & Arpels, featuring eighteen carats of flawless diamonds."
Xiomara leaned into Adonis, whispering something in his ear. He smiled—that tender, protective smile I remembered from our honeymoon.
"One hundred thousand," someone bid.
"One fifty," Adonis countered immediately, his voice carrying across the ballroom.
I felt Cassidy stiffen beside me. Around us, the whispers grew louder.
"Two hundred thousand," Adonis announced when someone dared to challenge him.
The room fell silent. The auctioneer's gavel came down with a sharp crack that echoed in my chest. "Sold, to Mr. Adonis King."
Xiomara actually squealed. She threw her arms around his neck right there, in front of everyone, and he kissed her. Not a polite peck—a real kiss, claiming and possessive.
The society columnists' cameras flashed like lightning.
"Trinity—" Cassidy started.
"I'm fine," I lied.
But I wasn't fine. I watched Adonis bid on seven more items—an African safari package, a week at a Maldives resort, a vintage wine collection—each one something Xiomara desired. Each bid a public declaration that she was worth everything, and I had been worth nothing.
By the time we left, my face ached from holding my smile. The headlines would write themselves. I could already see them: "The King Finds His True Queen."
Cassidy drove me home in silence. When we pulled up to my building, she finally spoke.
"He's trying to break you."
"He already did," I whispered.
Three days later, everything got worse.
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