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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 9

The conference room smelled of coffee and ambition, the particular scent of creative spaces where people worked too hard for too little money because they believed in something larger than themselves. Hadley had missed this smell. Had missed the energy of people building things, making things, arguing about kerning and negative space and the perfect shade of white.

Eleanor Frye was everything her reputation suggested. Sixtyish, silver-haired, dressed in black from head to toe, with the kind of presence that filled a room without effort. She had studied Hadley's portfolio in silence for ten minutes, turning pages with careful attention, occasionally making notes in a leather-bound book.

"This is good," she said finally, tapping a sketch of the mixed-use concept Hadley had been working on in her stolen hours. "The flow between public and private spaces. The way you use natural light." She looked up, her eyes sharp and assessing. "Where did you study?"

"Columbia. Graduate school. Then I-" Hadley stopped. Then I married a man who told me my work was a hobby, and I believed him. "Then I took some time away from the field."

"Three years." Eleanor made it a statement, not a question. "According to your resume. That's a long time in this industry. Styles change. Software changes. The world changes."

"I've kept up. Self-directed study. Online courses." Hadley leaned forward, willing the woman to see her, to understand what she was offering. "I know I'm rusty. I know I have gaps. But I also know that I see things differently now. That my time away-" She chose her words carefully. "That it gave me perspective. On what matters. On what buildings can do for people, not just what they can do for portfolios."

Eleanor was quiet for a moment. Then she smiled, a rare expression that transformed her severe face into something almost warm. "Spoken like someone who's lived in spaces that didn't serve her. Who's learned the difference between a house and a home."

"Yes."

"Well, Hadley Spencer-" Eleanor closed the portfolio, set it aside. "I think we can find a place for you here. Junior designer to start, of course. But with your eye, your instincts-"

The door burst open.

Hadley turned, expecting a fire drill, a delivery, some mundane interruption. Instead she saw Keely Logan in full battle dress: red-soled heels, tailored blazer, the pearl necklace that Hadley had finally managed to forget gleaming at her throat. And beside her, a man she didn't recognize, heavy-jowled and expensive-smelling, with the self-satisfied expression of someone who had never been told no.

"Eleanor, darling." Keely's voice dripped honey and poison. "I hope we're not interrupting. Richard and I were just in the neighborhood, thought we'd drop by to discuss that Adams Pope collaboration."

Eleanor's expression cooled. "Keely. This isn't a good time. I'm in the middle of an interview."

"An interview?" Keely's eyes found Hadley, and her smile widened into something predatory. "Oh. Oh, this is delicious. Hadley, darling. I had no idea you were here. What a small world."

Richard Adams stepped forward, extending a hand that Hadley didn't take. "Richard Adams, CEO of Adams Pope Design. And you are?"

"Hadley Spencer." She made herself stand, made herself meet his eyes. "Candidate for the junior designer position."

"Spencer." Adams frowned, searching his memory. "That name sounds familiar. Keely, isn't this-"

"The former Mrs. Blair Gregory, yes." Keely moved to the window, positioning herself in the light, making sure every angle was flattering. "Poor thing was thrown over just last week. And now here she is, trying to claw her way back into relevance." She turned to Eleanor, her tone shifting to one of feigned, professional concern. "Eleanor, you're a businesswoman. You understand optics. Hiring someone in the midst of such a... public and messy separation... it sends a certain message. It suggests a lack of discretion, a certain... instability."

"Keely." Eleanor's voice was steel. "That's enough. This is my office, my interview, my decision."

"Your decision." Adams moved to Keely's side, placing a proprietary hand on her shoulder. "That's interesting, Eleanor. Because from where I stand, it looks like you're considering hiring a liability. And we at Adams Pope, and our clients, we value discretion above all. We are prepared to offer Aethelred a very lucrative partnership. Exclusive rights to our residential division. But we have standards. We can't have our brand associated with... this kind of drama."

"Meaning?"

"Meaning," Keely said, her voice dropping, though it was still loud enough for the entire room to hear, "that Richard and I have discussed this. And as a condition of our partnership, we must insist on a certain standard of personnel. We can't risk our projects being tainted by tabloid fodder. I'm sure you understand. It's just business."

The room went silent. Eleanor's face had gone pale, her hands clenched on her desk. Adams looked pleased with himself, like a cat with a particularly satisfying mouse. And Keely's message was clear, a stiletto heel pressed to the throat of Hadley's nascent career.

Hadley's hands were shaking. She pressed them flat against her thighs, willing the tremor to stop, willing her voice to work. She would not cry. She would not beg. She would not give Keely the satisfaction of seeing her crumble.

Eleanor looked at Hadley. Looked at the portfolio, at the sketches, at the promise of work that might finally matter. Then she looked at Adams, at Keely, at the power they represented and the destruction they threatened.

"I need to consider-" she started.

"There's nothing to consider," Adams said smoothly. "It's a simple choice, Eleanor. A junior designer with a messy past, or a multi-million-dollar partnership that will secure your firm's future. The clock is ticking."

The door opened, not with a bang, but with a quiet click. Austen stood there. He wasn't looking at Keely or Adams. He was looking at Hadley.

"I'm sorry to interrupt," he said, his voice calm and even. He walked into the room, his presence immediately shifting its center of gravity. "My wife seems to have left her phone in the coffee shop." He held up her phone, then his gaze moved from Hadley to Eleanor, then to Keely and Adams, a slow, deliberate assessment.

"Are we interrupting something important?" he asked.

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