Follow
Chapters
Share
From Cast-off To The City's Queen Novel Cover

From Cast-off To The City's Queen

I spent three years making myself small, hiding my sketchbook beneath silk blouses just to keep the peace in a marriage that felt like a museum. Then, Blair came home early, bringing his first love, Keely, into our living room to serve me with divorce papers. He didn't look at me, only at the legal document he’d laid on the glass table like a death warrant for my entire life. He told me to be smart and sign it, while Keely smiled and thanked me for keeping his home and wearing her clothes while she was away. I had been nothing more than a placeholder, a shadow filling the space she’d left behind, and now I was being discarded without a cent or a home. I looked at the Baccarat chandelier and the life I had tried so hard to build, suddenly realizing that I had spent three years desperate for a love that was never on offer. I signed the papers, took nothing but my sketchbook, and walked out into the freezing November rain with three hundred dollars to my name and nowhere to go. I was nothing, I was alone, and I was entirely free. I stood on the corner of the street, shivering in the downpour, and made a desperate, insane gamble when a black car pulled up to the curb. I looked at the stranger behind the tinted glass and asked the only question I had left: "Do you need a wife?"
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The car turned onto Central Park West, and Hadley felt her breath catch.

She had been trying not to stare. Trying to occupy herself with the view from her window, with the soft leather of the seat beneath her hands, with anything except the man beside her who was now, legally and irrevocably, her husband. But the building drew her eye like a magnet-fifteen stories of limestone and glass, occupying the prime corner where Central Park met the city, the kind of address that appeared in magazines with captions like "Billionaire's Row" and "Most Coveted Real Estate in Manhattan."

She knew this building. Blair had tried to buy here, two years ago, when Gregory Capital's IPO had made him briefly the youngest billionaire on Wall Street. He had been rejected. Not for money-he had plenty of that. For "insufficient community contribution," whatever that meant. For lacking the right connections, the right pedigree, the right something that couldn't be purchased.

"Do you live here?" she asked, and hated how small her voice sounded.

Austen glanced at her. He had been working on his phone since they left City Hall, thumbs moving across the screen with practiced efficiency, but he set it aside now, giving her his full attention. "We live here," he corrected gently. "And yes. It's convenient."

Convenient. Hadley thought of her childhood home in Ohio, a three-bedroom ranch with aluminum siding and a driveway that cracked every winter. She thought of the Park Avenue apartment she had left three hours ago, with its white sofa and its Rothko and its museum-quality emptiness. She thought of Blair's face when he had learned he couldn't buy his way into this building, the tightness around his mouth, the way he had thrown the rejection letter into the fire.

The car stopped. The driver opened her door, and Austen was already there, offering his hand to help her out. She took it. His palm was warm, dry, the grip firm without being crushing. A hand that had never needed to prove anything.

They didn't enter through the main lobby. Austen led her around the corner, to a smaller entrance marked "Private Residence," where a security guard nodded recognition and stepped aside. An elevator waited, its doors already open. Austen pressed his thumb to a scanner, then inserted a key from his pocket. The doors closed. The elevator rose without stopping, without the sensation of passing floors, until it opened directly into-

Hadley stepped out and forgot how to breathe.

The space was enormous. Not large-enormous, the way museums were enormous, the way cathedrals were enormous. Floor-to-ceiling windows wrapped around three sides, framing Central Park in autumn glory, the reservoir gleaming like a fallen coin, the trees burning with color against the gray stone of the city. The furniture was modern without being cold, pieces she recognized from design magazines-Eames, Saarinen, a Noguchi coffee table that probably cost more than her college education.

And everywhere, light. Northern exposure, the holy grail of artists and architects, flooding the space with a clarity that made everything look like a photograph, like a dream.

"There's a kitchen," Austen was saying, moving through the space with the ease of long familiarity. "Three bedrooms, though we only need two. The master has an en-suite bath with a tub you could swim in. And-" He stopped, turned, seemed to actually see her for the first time since they entered. "Hadley?"

She was crying. She didn't know when she had started, only that her face was wet and her chest was heaving and she couldn't make it stop. "I'm sorry," she gasped. "I'm sorry, I don't know why-"

"Hey." He was beside her in two strides, his hands on her shoulders, turning her to face him. "Hey. Breathe. In. Out. Like that. Good."

She followed his rhythm, pulling air into lungs that felt too small, too shocked by the transition from rain-soaked desperation to this. To warmth. To light. To a man who guided her breathing like it mattered whether she lived or died.

"Better?" he asked, when her sobs had subsided to hiccups.

She nodded, mortified. "I'm sorry. It's just-Blair tried to buy here. He couldn't. They said no. And you just-" She gestured at the space, at the impossible luxury of it. "How is this possible?"

Austen's expression flickered-something there and gone too fast to identify. "I know the developer," he said. "He held this unit for personal use. When I mentioned I was looking for something in the city, he made me an offer I couldn't refuse." He released her shoulders, stepped back, gave her space to breathe. "It's not charity, Hadley. I pay market rate, more or less. I simply had the right conversation at the right time."

The right conversation. With the developer of the most exclusive building in Manhattan. Hadley filed this information away, adding it to the growing list of things she didn't understand about her husband of three hours.

"Come," Austen said. "There's something I want to show you."

He led her down a hallway, past the bedrooms she couldn't yet imagine sleeping in, to a door at the far end of the apartment. He opened it, stepped aside, let her enter first.

The room was a studio, but not in the way she'd imagined. It was empty, save for a single wooden stool in the center. But it was perfect. A vast, north-facing wall of glass flooded the space with the kind of pure, indirect light that artists dream of. The floors were polished concrete, the walls a pristine, gallery-white. It was a blank canvas of a room, humming with potential.

"This is yours," Austen said from the doorway. "I wasn't sure what you'd need. Whether you paint, or draw, or design on a computer. I thought it best you choose the tools yourself."

Hadley walked to the center of the room. Her fingers brushed the cool surface of the glass wall. She thought of the window seat in Blair's apartment, the hiding place, the shame of wanting something he didn't value. She thought of three years of sketching in secret, of building worlds in her mind that would never exist in stone and glass. This empty room felt more like a gift than a fully-stocked studio ever could. It was an acknowledgment, not a prescription. It was space. It was trust.

"You don't know me," she said, not turning around. "You don't know what I want, what I need, what I-"

"I know you're a designer." His voice came from the doorway, patient as it had been in the rain. "I know you carry a sketchbook like other women carry purses. I know you look at buildings the way most people look at sunsets-with recognition, with longing, with the sense that you're seeing something true." He paused. "And I know that whatever you were before tonight, you don't have to be that anymore. You can be Hadley Spencer. Or Hadley Roy. Or someone else entirely. It's your choice."

She turned. He was holding something-a black rectangle, featureless except for the subtle embossing of a name she didn't recognize. He held it out to her.

"Credit card," he said. "No limit. For supplies. Or clothes. Or whatever you need to start over. Consider it an advance on whatever arrangement we eventually settle on."

She didn't take it. "I can't."

"You can."

"I won't." She met his eyes, found them waiting, patient, unsurprised. "I'll find work. I'll pay my own way. That's the only way this-" She gestured between them, at the strangeness of their situation. "The only way this works. If I'm not dependent on you. If I have my own life, my own money, my own-"

"Space," he finished for her. "Yes. I understand." He tucked the card back into his pocket, unoffended. "The offer stands, if you change your mind. In the meantime-" He indicated the studio. "This is yours. The apartment is yours. My bedroom is at the opposite end of the hall. You won't be disturbed."

He turned to leave.

"Austen." The name felt strange in her mouth, foreign and intimate at once. "Why are you doing this? Any of this?"

He stopped in the doorway. For a moment, the mask slipped-something vulnerable, something searching, flickered across his features. Then it was gone, replaced by the polite distance she was learning to recognize.

"Because I can," he said. And closed the door behind him.

Hadley stood in the studio, surrounded by light and possibility, and opened her sketchbook to a fresh page. Her pencil moved without conscious direction, sketching the space around her, the windows, the view, the way the city seemed to hold its breath at this height. She worked until her hand cramped, until the sky outside darkened to true night, until she could no longer keep her eyes open.

She slept on the couch in the living room, unwilling to face the bedroom Austen had assigned her, unwilling to admit how thoroughly her life had changed in a single evening. Her last conscious thought was of Blair, of the champagne popping, of the pearl necklace that had never been hers.

She didn't dream of him. She dreamed of buildings-glass and steel and light, reaching toward a sky that finally, finally, had no ceiling.

You may also like

After My Husband Denied Me At His Victory Novel Cover
9.5
The day my husband’s team won the championship, he stood on stage as both the captain and one of the only two men in the international tournament. He had promised to unveil the identity of his mysterious wife. That evening, I washed my weary hands, slipped into my most elegant Victorian dress, and waited anxiously backstage, hoping to hear my name. But under the glare of countless spotlights, he stood with the team's vice-captain and announced to the cameras that she was the love of his life. I was lost in the sea of cheering fans, my phone screen displaying a terse, unemotional message from him. "Amaris has had feelings for me for three years, and the fans are rooting for us to be together. You’re just a regular person; revealing our marriage would harm my career." That night, I didn't break down or question him as I usually would. Instead, I quietly removed the ring from my finger and watched as he and Amaris kissed under the lights. We had supported each other for twenty years, but this time, I decided to live for myself. In the midst of endless cheers, I glanced at my phone screen, almost hearing Reign’s voice as if he were speaking the words.
Billionaire's Crazy Obsession Novel Cover
8.5
Miss Genevive Brooks ,your parents died in a car crash.please coke and collect their bodies .Shattered ,she reached out to her billionaire husband.His only response was I'm busy solve your problems on your own . Okay she whispered,that night she handed him divorce papers and walked out of his life, leaving all his wealth behind . She never wanted money ,she wanted love .He gave her nothing so she took nothing. James thought she wouldn't survive without him and that she would crawl back .Instead she vanished .And when he found her again she was living in luxuries far beyond his reach. For some reason Lucas Blackwell, one of the most powerful ,cunning and possessive billionaires in the country,was madly devoted to his ex-wife. Now victor is unraveling, jealousy burns him alive but he got what he wanted didn't he ? You're my wife ,you can never run from me
From Ashes To Adored Bride's Happiness Novel Cover
7.1
The night I reached the pinnacle of my career as a concert pianist, my husband was in a car with his mistress. Their argument caused the crash that crushed my hands, ending my future in an instant. In the hospital, my adopted daughter, Kennedy, stood over my bed and blamed me. "This is all your fault," she whispered, her eyes cold. Then, his mistress arrived with a bouquet of lilies, knowing I was deathly allergic. As I suffocated, my husband watched with annoyance while my daughter accused me of faking it. "Stop pretending, Mom. Aunt Christine's flowers are beautiful." I lost more than my hands that night. The last thing I heard before blacking out was a doctor shouting, "The fetus has a weak heartbeat!" I woke up to find my career gone, my baby gone, and my family vacationing with my replacement. So I vanished. For six years, I built a new life from the ashes, finding peace with a new husband and son. But now he's back, with an ultimatum: abandon my new life and return to his side, or he'll destroy everything I hold dear.
He Chose His Secret Wife Over Me Novel Cover
9.8
I reached for my fiancé's phone to silence an alarm and found a hidden folder named "The Protocol." Inside was a spreadsheet that systematically dismantled my entire existence. Task 399: Buy blue hydrangeas. Note: Her favorite. For Denzel. Task 400: Schedule anniversary dinner. Note: Make sure she feels special. For Denzel. In that heartbeat, I realized the man I had loved for three years hadn't looked at me once without seeing a chore list left by his dead brother. I wasn't Elfrieda Stewart, the woman Jaxon Tate loved. I was a legacy project. The truth turned lethal at our engagement gala. When a massive chandelier detached from the ceiling, Jaxon didn't lunge for me. He tackled his "ex" Janice—who I later discovered was his secret wife—to safety. He left me standing in the center of the target to be crushed by shattering glass. But the cruelty didn't end there. On a "reconciliation" yacht trip, Janice pushed me overboard. Jaxon looked at me struggling in the freezing black water, then threw the life preserver to her. He saved the shark and left me to drown. I lost everything in that water, including the unborn child I hadn't even told him about. He thought I was dead. He thought he was free to play house with Janice. But my brother pulled me from the darkness. And when I resurfaced in Norway, wearing the ring of a man far more dangerous than Jaxon could ever dream of being, Jaxon realized too late that he had destroyed the only thing that could have saved him.
My Husband Used Our Newborn’s Blood To Save His Mistress Novel Cover
9.0
Roger's mistress was ill. When our daughter was born, he brought her into our home. He frowned, saying, "The baby's blood can save Alaina; make sure she gets plenty to eat so we can take blood." "She'll cry at night; move to the spare bedroom so she doesn't disturb Alaina's rest." I wiped away my tears, packed our things, and walked out holding my child. Cataleya, the nursemaid, tried to stop me, but Roger sneered at me openly: "Let her go. She has no family, and she's been a housewife for years; I'm curious where she'll end up!" Even in front of me, he embraced Alaina and kissed her deeply. But he didn't know—I had found someone who would take my daughter away. I didn't have much time left. --- After the complications during childbirth, I was weak. I cradled my daughter as I walked out. Roger suddenly shouted, "Wait, leave the baby.
Not My Type Anymore, Ex Husband Novel Cover
8.1
I gave up everything for love—my name, my inheritance, my future. I walked away from wealth and legacy just to be his wife, believing I was choosing a man who would protect me. Instead, I became a ghost in my own home—unseen, unvalued, and easily replaced. They called me dramatic when I asked to be loved. They called me selfish for wanting to be remembered. Even my own daughter looks through me like I’m wallpaper she’s tired of seeing. Now, my husband is off to Italy with the woman he’s always loved, the one he wished I could be. And I… I’m supposed to smile, pack their designer clothes, and be grateful for leftover affection. But here’s the thing—they forgot who I was before I chose them. Before I buried Eloise McDermott. They thought I’d stay silent forever. But they’re wrong. Because I’m done being the maid. And they’re about to learn what happens when the woman they threw away... comes back for everything.