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His First Love Was My Last Straw Novel Cover

His First Love Was My Last Straw

My son made his birthday wish in front of twenty people. "I wish the pretty lady was my real mommy instead." He was looking right at me when he said it. Five years old. My own flesh and blood. And the "pretty lady" he's talking about? My husband's dying ex-girlfriend — the one currently wearing my mother's necklace and living in the guest suite of my house. I didn't cry. I stopped crying the night Kade gave away our wedding — the one I'd spent six months planning, down to the custom Vera Wang — to let her experience walking down the aisle. Because she's terminally ill. Because she "only has months left." Because I'm supposed to be the bigger person. I've been the bigger person for five years. Bigger than the woman sleeping in my home. Bigger than the whispered phone calls at 2 AM. Bigger than watching my husband look at someone else the way he's never once looked at me. But here's what Kade Ashford doesn't know. I'm not breaking down tonight. I'm breaking free. The divorce papers are already signed — my side, anyway. And the offshore accounts his family thinks are hidden? I've had the routing numbers for three months. I slide the papers across the table. His face doesn't even change. He's already checking his phone — she's been rushed to the ER again. He leaves without signing. What he doesn't expect is who's waiting for me outside. Ryker Callahan. Six-three. Jaw like it was carved from Carrara marble. The kind of man who walks into a room and every woman forgets her own name. The founder of the venture fund that just acquired a controlling stake in the Ashford family's empire. And apparently, he's been watching me for a while. "You look like a woman who's about to do something magnificent." His voice is low and unhurried — the voice of a man who's never had to rush for anything because everything eventually comes to him. And the way his eyes drag down my face, slow and deliberate, makes my pulse do something it hasn't done in five years. I'm still legally married to a man who doesn't want me. And the most dangerous man in Austin is looking at me like I'm the only interesting thing in this city. This is either my revenge — or my ruin.
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Chapter 2

The front door hadn't even finished shaking on its expensive hinges before I was back on my feet. My chair scraped harshly back against the hardwood floor, the sound aggressive and far too loud in the empty, echoing house. I walked back to the dining table with slow, hyper-deliberate movements. My hands had completely stopped trembling. My breath came in smooth, steady rhythms.

Something weak and pathetic inside me had permanently calcified overnight—turning from soft, yielding, hurting flesh into something harder than diamonds. Something permanent.

I picked up the ruined roasted chicken first. The congealed fat gleamed dully under the multi-thousand-dollar chandelier as I ruthlessly scraped it into the garbage disposal. Then the potatoes. Then the untouched, perfectly seasoned vegetables I'd spent an hour roasting. Each ceramic dish clattered violently into the stainless-steel sink with a hollow finality.

The cake went last. I stared at it for a long, heavy moment—yellow sponge with vanilla buttercream frosting, the exact kind I'd made from scratch every single year since Theo was born. Kade's absolute favorite. A birthday cake for a woman no one remembered, baked by hands that had learned far too late that blind devotion was never enough. I tipped the entire thing into the trash can without a single flicker of hesitation.

Then I pulled out my phone and dialed the only number I still knew by heart.

Maren Vance answered on the third ring, her usually sharp voice thick and gravelly with sleep. "Sienna? Do you have any idea what time it is?"

"I'm leaving him."

A pause. Three long, heavy heartbeats of silence stretched across the cellular connection.

"Okay," Maren said slowly, her tone shifting. I could hear her sitting up, the expensive sheets rustling through the speaker. "Okay. You've said that before, Sienna. Why is this time any different?"

I closed my eyes and let out a long, perfectly steady breath. "Because I saw my dead mother's pearl necklace secured tightly around his mistress's throat tonight. Because my five-year-old son just recited a rehearsed speech about how I shouldn't be angry over 'something this small.' Because Kade literally ran out on our fifth anniversary to be with her, and I—" My voice caught, but only for a fraction of a second. "I felt absolutely nothing. No jealousy. Just clarity."

Another pause. Then Maren's voice shifted entirely into something sharper. Lethal. Focused. "Can you be at my law office by nine a.m. sharp?"

"Yes."

"Good. Listen to me very carefully, Sienna. Ashford family assets are a labyrinth. There are offshore trusts, shell companies, commercial properties scattered across three continents. But you never signed a prenup. That was never an accident, was it? Even when Victoria Ashford pushed for it, Kade arrogantly refused. That is the one single thing that bastard did right by you." Her tone softened, dropping the lawyer persona for just a moment. "You might not want a dime of his dirty money, but you absolutely cannot walk away empty-handed. Not after five years of psychological torture. Not after everything you gave up for them."

I thought about the thriving bespoke jewelry studio I'd closed to be a "proper" mother. The gorgeous, half-finished collections I'd abandoned. The reputation I'd built entirely on my own before becoming just another decorative Ashford wife with nothing to show for it but a freezing house and a hollowed-out heart.

"I don't want his money, Maren," I said quietly, the truth ringing in the dark kitchen. "I just want to be free."

"You can refuse the final settlement check," Maren replied with iron-clad firmness. "But you cannot refuse the legal leverage. Trust me on this. I will destroy them in discovery."

I ended the call and climbed the grand staircase.

Our master bedroom felt utterly foreign to me now. Too large. Too cold. A museum exhibit. The California king bed we'd shared for five years sat aggressively in the center of the room like a monument to an intimacy that had never actually existed. I opened the massive walk-in closet and stared blankly at the endless rows of clothes—designer gowns, structured blazers, Louboutins I'd worn to endless charity galas where I'd smiled at wealthy strangers and pretended my marriage wasn't rotting from the inside out.

I took absolutely none of it.

Instead, I dug until I found my old, scuffed canvas duffel bag buried in the deep back of the storage closet. I packed strictly two days' worth of basic clothes. Essential toiletries. My passport. My laptop.

And then I saw it—tucked far behind a stack of old fashion magazines I'd completely forgotten existed. A heavy wooden box, lacquered black with elegant gold trim. My jewelry crafting tools.

I hadn't opened it in four long years. The brass hinges creaked in protest as I lifted the heavy lid. Inside, arranged with the sterile precision of a surgeon's kit, sat my pliers, my jeweler's saw, my soldering torch. The microfiber polishing cloth was still folded neatly in the corner. Everything looked brand new, desperately untouched. I ran my thumb slowly along the cold edge of a pair of needle-nose pliers.

I had a name once. A fiercely independent career. High-end collectors had waited months on waitlists for my custom pieces. And then I'd married Kade Ashford, and his mother Victoria had smiled that tight, porcelain smile and said, *"Ashford wives don't work, darling. It's terribly unseemly."* And like an absolute fool, blinded by love, I had believed her.

I snapped the box shut and shoved it into my duffel bag.

Theo's room was at the far end of the sprawling hall. I stopped outside his door, my trembling hand hovering over the frame. It was cracked open, a sharp sliver of silver moonlight cutting aggressively across the plush carpet. I pushed it gently and stepped inside the sanctuary.

He was deeply asleep, sprawled carelessly across his bed with one small arm dangling off the edge. A worn stuffed bear was clutched tightly to his chest—the exact same bear I'd seen featured prominently in Celine's social media photos. Celine had given it to him. Another calculated gift. Another insidious way of inserting herself like a parasite into the sacred spaces I'd tried to carve for myself in this family.

His nightstand held a framed photograph. Theo and Celine, their heads bent closely together over a puzzle. Her pale, delicate hand resting possessively on his small shoulder. His smile in the photo was wide and totally unguarded.

There were absolutely no photos of me.

I stood there in the dark for a very long moment. My chest ached, hollowed out and bruised. I had carried this boy in my body for nine grueling months. I'd endured thirty-six agonizing hours of labor and a severe hemorrhage that had very nearly killed me. I had given up absolutely everything—my promising career, my independent identity, my mother's legacy—just to be his mother.

And somehow, through a slow drip of manipulation, I'd still lost him.

I bent down and pressed a lingering kiss to his warm forehead. His soft skin smelled distinctly of the expensive lavender soap Celine had recently started buying for him. "Goodbye, my sweet love," I whispered into the quiet room.

Then I turned and walked out.

---

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