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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?"
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Chapter 8

Blair stared at the photograph on his screen until his eyes burned.

It wasn't a clear shot. Just a black Bentley, a uniformed chauffeur holding a door, and Hadley disappearing inside. But the message was unmistakable. The quiet, effortless power of it all. This wasn't a desperate woman clinging to a new man; this was a woman being shielded, protected, elevated.

"Central Park West," Alex had said, his voice tight with strain. "She's living at 15 Central Park West. The penthouse. The one that doesn't exist on any listing, that was never for sale-"

"I know what it is." Blair's voice was barely audible, even to himself. He knew. He had tried to buy that apartment, had been rejected with polite regret, had burned with the shame of insufficiency for months afterward. And now Hadley-Hadley, who had signed away his name without a fight, who had walked out with nothing but a sketchbook-was sleeping in the bed he had been denied.

He opened the email from the numbered address. Read it again, the five words that had kept him awake for two nights: "Stop looking. She is protected."

Protected. The word tasted like poison. Like jealousy. Like the dawning recognition that he had made a mistake so profound it might never be undone.

He thought of her on the stairs. The straight back, the refusal to look at him, the words that had followed him into sleep: I hope you and the person you love never have to feel what I'm feeling right now.

He had thought it was theater. A final attempt to manipulate him, to make him feel guilty, to change his mind. He had thought she would crumble, would return, would remember what she was giving up and come crawling back with apologies and promises to be better, to be more like Keely, to be whatever he wanted.

Instead, she had found this. A man with a Bentley and a penthouse on Central Park West and the power to silence newspapers with a phone call. A man who was wrapping her in a world of silent, formidable power.

Blair stood. He moved to the window, pressed his forehead against the cold glass, and let himself feel it. The jealousy. The loss. The terrible, dawning certainty that he had thrown away something valuable and someone else had recognized its worth.

He thought of three years. Of mornings when she had brought him coffee exactly as he liked it, when she had remembered his preferences without being asked, when she had sat in his meetings taking notes and never once complained about the boredom or the late hours. He remembered the nights he'd come home late, exhausted, to find her asleep on the window seat, her sketchbook fallen from her fingers. He'd feel a flash of irritation-at the disorder, at her being out of place. He'd nudge her awake, his voice rougher than he intended. "Go to bed, Hadley." Or, if he was too tired to bother, he'd just grab the cashmere throw from the sofa and toss it over her before retreating to the silence of his study.

He had thought those moments meant nothing. Had thought they were just part of the domestic machinery he'd acquired. He had never asked about the sketches. Never wondered what she drew in those stolen hours, what worlds she built in her imagination, what she might have become if he had encouraged her instead of diminishing her.

"Sir?" Alex's voice through the phone, which he still held clutched in his hand. "Do you want me to continue surveillance?"

Blair looked at his reflection in the glass. At the face that had launched a thousand deals, that had graced magazine covers, that had been called the most eligible bachelor in Manhattan before he married a girl from Ohio who didn't know which fork to use.

"Where is she now?" he asked.

"Still at Aethelred. The interview's been going for forty minutes."

"And him?"

"His car is gone. He must be at his meeting. She's alone in there."

Blair made a decision. He didn't let himself think about it, didn't let himself consider the implications or the consequences or the sheer insanity of what he was about to do. He simply moved, grabbing his jacket, his keys, the phone still pressed to his ear.

"I'm coming there."

"Sir-"

"Text me the address. And Alex-" He was running now, past his assistant's desk, past the conference room where he had closed deals worth billions, past the life he had built with such careful calculation. "Don't let her leave. I need to see her. I need to-"

He stopped at the elevator, breathless, the words catching in his throat. Need to what? Apologize? Explain? Beg her to come back, to forget the stranger with the Bentley, to remember that she had belonged to him first?

The elevator doors opened. He stepped inside, pressed the button for the garage, and watched his reflection multiply in the mirrored walls. A man in a six-thousand-dollar suit, with a two-hundred-dollar haircut, with everything he had ever wanted except the one thing he was only now realizing he had lost.

He drove too fast. The Aston Martin responded like the machine it was, hugging corners, accelerating through yellow lights, carrying him across Manhattan in a blur of red and silver. He didn't think about what he would say. Didn't plan his approach, his argument, his appeal. For the first time in his professional life, Blair Gregory was operating on pure instinct, pure emotion, pure desperate need.

The building appeared ahead, the converted warehouse with its cast-iron facade. He saw Alex's sedan, parked across the street. He didn't see the Bentley. Good. He was alone.

He didn't park properly. Left the Aston Martin double-parked, hazards flashing, and ran toward the entrance. The door was locked-of course it was locked, this was a design studio, not a retail store-but he could see through the glass, could see the reception area, the hallway beyond, the open door of what looked like a conference room-

And there she was.

Hadley. His Hadley. Standing with her back to him, facing a woman he didn't recognize, holding a portfolio that trembled slightly in her hands. She looked professional. She looked capable. She looked like someone who had never needed him at all.

He pulled at the door. It didn't budge. He knocked, hard, then harder, until the woman at the reception desk looked up, startled, and began moving toward him with the wary expression of someone who had dealt with angry men before.

Through the glass, he saw Hadley turn, her face transforming from professional composure to shock. He saw her lips form his name.

"Open the door," he called out, his voice muffled. "I need to speak with Hadley. Hadley, please. I just need to explain-"

The receptionist was talking into a phone, her eyes never leaving his face. He didn't care. He needed to get to Hadley before her new protector returned, before she was swallowed up again by that silent, impenetrable world.

He saw her say something to the woman she was with, then walk purposefully out of the conference room and toward the front door. She was coming to him. A surge of triumphant relief shot through him. She was still his. She would still listen.

She opened the door, stepping out onto the sidewalk and closing it firmly behind her, creating a barrier between him and her new life. She stood before him, her spine straight, her gaze steady. There was no fear in her eyes. Only a weary sort of disappointment.

"Blair." She said his name like it meant nothing. Like it was just a sound, a label, a word she had outgrown. "What are you doing here?"

He looked at her. At the woman he had married, had ignored, had discarded. At the stranger she had become in eleven days, with her ill-fitting professional clothes and her steady gaze and the ring on her finger that he hadn't noticed until now, simple gold, completely unlike the diamond he had given her and she had left behind.

"I came to-" He stopped. What had he come to do? What could he possibly say that would undo what he had done, that would bridge the chasm between who he had been and who she needed him to be?

"I came to warn you," he finished, the lie coming easily, desperately. "This man-this Roy-he's not what he seems. I can't find any record of him. Any history. He's dangerous, Hadley. He's using you for-"

"For what?" Her voice was calm, curious, completely without the fear or gratitude he had expected. "What could I possibly have that a man like that would want?"

The question hung in the air. Blair had no answer. He had never had an answer for why Hadley mattered, why she had stayed, why her absence now felt like a missing limb.

"Go home, Blair." She said it gently, almost kindly, which was worse than anger would have been. "There's nothing for you here. There hasn't been for a long time."

She turned, put her hand on the door to go back inside.

"Wait," he said, his hand shooting out to grab her arm. He didn't mean to be rough, but his fingers closed around her wrist with the force of his desperation. "Don't go back in there. Come with me. We can talk. Properly."

She looked down at his hand on her arm, then back up at his face. Her expression didn't change, but a new coldness entered her eyes. "Let go of me, Blair."

"Not until you listen-"

"I said, let go."

A voice, low and calm and completely unthreatened, cut through the tension. "I believe the lady asked you to release her."

Blair's head snapped up. The man from the coffee shop-Roy-was standing there. He hadn't been there a second ago. He moved with a silent speed that was unnerving. He wasn't looking at Blair's hand on Hadley's wrist. He was looking directly into Blair's eyes. And in their dark depths, Blair saw no anger, no threat. Only a vast, chilling certainty.

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