
His Broke Ex-Wife Has a Billionaire Best Friend
Chapter 1
The fluorescent lights of the CVS pharmacy buzzed overhead like angry wasps as I fumbled through my wallet for the fourth time. My prescription bottle sat on the counter between us—thirty pills of Percocet that I desperately needed after last week's minor surgery—while the cashier's patience visibly thinned.
"Your Amex has been declined, ma'am. All four of them."
The words hit me like a slap. Behind me, I could feel the growing line of customers shifting restlessly. A mother with a crying toddler sighed loudly. An elderly man cleared his throat.
"That's impossible," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the store's generic pop music. "Try this one again." I slid my platinum card across the counter with trembling fingers.
The cashier—a tired-looking woman in her fifties with kind eyes that were rapidly losing their sympathy—ran the card through the machine. The harsh beep of rejection echoed through the small space.
"Declined."
My chest tightened. I could feel heat creeping up my neck as I dug deeper into my purse, searching for my backup cards. The Visa. Declined. The Mastercard. Declined. Even my emergency debit card—the one I'd barely touched in two years—came back with the same soul-crushing response.
The woman behind me with the screaming toddler let out an exaggerated sigh. "Some of us have places to be," she muttered.
I wanted to disappear into the floor. Instead, I stood there, my hands shaking as I stared at the small pile of useless plastic in front of me. These weren't just credit cards—they were my lifeline, my independence, my proof that I existed in this world as more than just Ryker's wife.
"I'm sorry," I managed, my voice cracking. "I'll have to come back."
The cashier's expression softened slightly as she set the prescription bottle aside. "No problem, honey. We'll hold it for you."
I gathered my rejected cards and stumbled toward the exit, my face burning with humiliation. The automatic doors couldn't open fast enough. Outside, the Austin heat hit me like a wall, but it was nothing compared to the cold dread spreading through my chest.
I collapsed into the driver's seat of my Tesla—our Tesla—and sat there for a moment, trying to process what had just happened. My phone buzzed with a notification from the car's system, and my blood turned to ice.
*Tesla account access removed. Vehicle will be remotely locked in 24 hours. Contact account administrator for details.*
Even the car. He was taking even the car.
My hands shook as I dialed Ryker's number. It rang once, twice, three times before his familiar voice answered—cold and businesslike, as if I were just another client calling about a delayed payment.
"Ivy."
"What the hell did you do to my cards?" The words tumbled out in a rush, desperation making my voice higher than usual.
"I let finance do some housekeeping." His tone was so casual, so matter-of-fact, that it made my stomach turn. "Everything you've been using belongs to the company, Ivy. I thought it was time to clarify that."
"Those are our joint accounts! Our shared assets!" I gripped the phone so tightly my knuckles went white. "You can't just—"
"Actually, I can." I could practically hear him smiling through the phone. "You might want to revisit section seven of our prenup. All marital assets are held by Caldera Ventures LLC. You signed off on that, remember? Without even bothering to get your own lawyer."
The memory hit me like a physical blow. Three years ago, sitting in his lawyer's office, Ryker's hand warm on my back as he whispered that it was just a formality, that his investors required it. I'd been so drunk on love, so eager to start our life together, that I'd signed without question.
"My family gave you fifty thousand dollars to start that company," I said, grasping for any foothold in this conversation.
"A wedding gift," he corrected smoothly. "Your father's transfer note said 'Congratulations on your marriage.' Gifts aren't investments, sweetheart. They're gifts."
The casual cruelty in his voice—the way he called me 'sweetheart' while systematically destroying my life—made bile rise in my throat.
"My lawyer will be in touch tomorrow with the paperwork," he continued. "Let's not make this uglier than it has to be."
The line went dead.
I sat there in the parking lot, staring at my phone's black screen, feeling like I'd been hollowed out from the inside. Everything I thought I knew about my life, my marriage, my security—it was all an illusion. Worse than that, it was a trap I'd walked into willingly, signing my name with a smile.
With shaking fingers, I tried to log into our joint bank account. Password incorrect. I tried the password recovery option, only to discover that the associated email address was no longer mine. It had been changed to some generic Caldera Ventures address.
Every door was slamming shut.
I opened Instagram, desperate for some connection to the outside world, maybe to reach out to my friend Sierra for help. But the first thing I saw was a post from @CalderaVentures celebrating their latest milestone—company valuation hits $120 million. The photo showed Ryker in his corner office, raising a champagne flute with that megawatt smile that had first attracted me at a charity gala three years ago.
But it was the background that made my breath catch. The abstract painting I'd chosen for his office—the one I'd spent weeks selecting because the blues reminded me of the ocean where we'd honeymooned—was gone. In its place hung some sterile corporate art that looked like it came from a hotel lobby.
Even my aesthetic choices were being erased.
I scrolled through the comments, each congratulatory message feeling like another nail in the coffin of my former life. Then I saw it—someone had tagged @JadeWilliams with a heart emoji.
My finger hovered over the name for a long moment before I clicked.
Jade Williams. Twenty-six years old according to her bio. Marketing coordinator. And her most recent post made my world tilt sideways.
It was a cooking video—a trendy Reel showing perfectly manicured hands preparing what looked like coq au vin. But I recognized everything in the frame. My Le Creuset Dutch oven. My marble countertops. My kitchen window with its view of the hill country.
She was wearing my apron.
The woman was in my house, using my things, living my life like I'd never existed at all. The comments were full of heart-eye emojis and questions about the recipe. She was playing house with my husband in my kitchen, and the internet was eating it up.
I stared at the screen until my eyes burned, watching this stranger move through my space with casual familiarity. She knew where everything was. This wasn't her first time cooking in my kitchen.
My phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number, and I nearly dropped it.
*The woman with your husband isn't just a side piece. Check Caldera's Series B investor list.*
Sent three minutes ago.
I stared at the message, my heart hammering against my ribs. Someone was watching. Someone knew what was happening to me. But more importantly, someone was suggesting that this went deeper than just an affair.
My finger hovered over the message, trembling.
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