
Ex-Wife Seizes the Throne
Chapter 1
I never thought my world would collapse because of an Instagram post.
It was just after eleven on a Tuesday night. William had texted that he was working late—again—so I'd settled into our sitting room with a glass of cabernet, absently scrolling through social media while Chopin played softly in the background. The plush cream sofa enveloped me as rain tapped against the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Upper East Side penthouse.
Then I saw it.
My finger froze mid-scroll. The glass nearly slipped from my hand.
It was a casual post from Devin Marsh, one of William's associates: "Great minds at work even after hours #WallStreetNeverSleeps." The photo showed a cozy corner of Verre, an exclusive wine bar in Tribeca. And there they were—William and his assistant Lily, huddled close in a leather booth. He was sketching what looked like market projections on a cocktail napkin, his head bent toward hers. But it wasn't the impromptu lesson that made my stomach clench.
It was the way she looked at him.
Lily's gaze held the unmistakable shine of adoration, her body angled toward his, their shoulders touching in a way that spoke of intimacy beyond professional boundaries. William's wedding ring was nowhere in sight.
I zoomed in, studying every pixel as if it might reveal a different truth. My hands trembled slightly as I typed a comment before I could stop myself: "Interesting work session. Didn't know Verre was the new office." I immediately regretted it, but couldn't bring myself to delete it.
I barely slept that night, William's side of the bed remaining empty until dawn broke through our bedroom windows.
The next morning, I waited in our kitchen, perched on a barstool at the marble island. I'd made his favorite breakfast—poached eggs on avocado toast—though my own stomach was too knotted to eat. The smell of freshly brewed coffee filled the air as William strode in, already dressed in a charcoal Tom Ford suit, checking his watch.
"William, we need to talk about that photo from last night," I said, trying to keep my voice steady.
He glanced up, his expression hardening instantly. "What photo?"
"The one Devin posted. You and Lily at Verre."
A flash of something—annoyance? panic?—crossed his face before settling into a practiced mask of condescension.
"Jesus, Natalie. This is exactly why I don't tell you about work meetings. Your dirty mind turns everything into something it's not." He picked up his coffee, taking a dismissive sip.
"Work meetings don't usually happen in wine bars with your assistant gazing at you like that," I countered, hating the defensive note in my voice.
William's jaw clenched. "Like what exactly? Like she's learning from the best in the business? Because that's what was happening. I was explaining the Reynolds merger strategy."
"At eleven at night? In a romantic wine bar?"
"For God's sake, delete that ridiculous comment. You're embarrassing yourself—and me." His voice had dropped to that dangerous quiet tone he used when truly angry. "I don't have time for this paranoia. I'm leaving for Los Angeles this afternoon."
"Los Angeles? Since when?" My heart pounded against my ribs. "You didn't mention any trip."
"It just came up. The Westridge acquisition needs attention." He wouldn't meet my eyes as he straightened his already perfect tie. "I don't know when I'll be back. Could be a week, could be longer."
The casual way he announced his indefinite departure felt like a slap. After seven years of marriage, this was what I'd become—an afterthought, someone to be informed rather than consulted.
"William, please. Can we just talk about this?"
"There's nothing to talk about. Delete the comment, Natalie." He grabbed his briefcase, his wedding ring suddenly visible and somehow obscene. "I have to go."
The door closed behind him with quiet finality, leaving me alone in our perfect kitchen, staring at a breakfast that would go uneaten.
That night, sleep eluded me again. Around two in the morning, I found myself standing outside William's home office, a room I rarely entered. Something pulled me forward—intuition or desperation, I couldn't tell which.
I switched on his desk lamp, casting a pool of warm light across the polished mahogany. His computer was password-protected, but he'd left his email open on his tablet. My fingers hesitated over the screen. I'd never snooped before—had prided myself on the trust between us.
What a fool I'd been.
I skimmed through his recent emails, my breath catching when I found a thread with Lily. Most were innocuous work exchanges, but several ended with "XO" or contained inside jokes I wasn't privy to. One message about a "private strategy session" was scheduled for the exact time they'd been at Verre.
I set the tablet down, a cold certainty settling in my chest where doubt had been swirling. As I switched off the lamp and closed the office door behind me, something else flickered to life inside me—something small but fierce, like an ember catching in dry kindling.
I didn't know it then, but that ember would soon become a blaze.
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