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I Left My CEO Husband. His Billionaire Enemy Found Me First. Novel Cover

I Left My CEO Husband. His Billionaire Enemy Found Me First.

*He asked four girls to flash him on a group call. I found out. I left.* Now my ex, Liam—the man every woman drools over—thinks I'll crawl back. He's wrong. Because at the lowest moment of my life, *he* walked in. Kade Covington. Billionaire. My ex's billionaire rival. And he made me an offer I should refuse: *"Let me ruin him. Wear my ring. Share my bed. And I'll make sure Liam chokes on every regret."* But the closer I get to Kade, the more I realize—this isn't about revenge anymore. This man plans to keep me. Forever. And Liam? He's about to learn what happens when you break the wrong girl's heart.
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Chapter 1

The champagne was too sweet.

That was the first thing I remembered thinking, right before my world split open.

I'd been standing near the edge of the ballroom with a flute of Moët pressed to my lips, watching Liam work the room the way he always did—easy smile, easy charm, that particular brand of effortless magnetism that made you feel lucky just for knowing him. The Kingstons had rented out the entire rooftop of the Harlow Hotel for his twenty-third birthday. Crystal chandeliers. A live jazz quartet. Two hundred guests dressed like they were rehearsing for their own magazine spreads.

I wore midnight blue. Liam had picked it out.

Somebody dimmed the lights.

A cheer went up from the crowd—I assumed it was for the birthday toast, assumed the projection screen behind the makeshift stage was about to fill with some embarrassing childhood photo montage. Liam's mother had mentioned something like that earlier, laughing, squeezing my arm like we were already family.

The screen flickered.

And then every single person in that room was staring at my boyfriend's dick.

My champagne flute slipped.

I heard the crystal hit the marble before I felt my fingers go empty. The sound was sharp and clean and impossibly loud, but no one turned to look at me—they were all transfixed by the projection, the blue-white glow of it painting two hundred slack jaws in ghostly light. The moaning was quiet at first, almost buried under the jazz track that kept playing for four surreal seconds before someone killed it. Then the sound filled the whole room.

A girl's voice. Breathless. Familiar.

*Liam. Show me yours first.*

Mackenzie.

My best friend Mackenzie's voice, cooing up at him from somewhere off-screen, and the sound of it hit me somewhere below the sternum, something cold and blunt pressing straight through.

I didn't move. I couldn't. My heels were rooted to the floor and my nails were digging into my palm—half-moons forming, pressure building, the sting of it the only thing keeping me upright while two hundred people I'd smiled at all night turned to find me in the crowd with the specific, hungry curiosity of people watching a car accident.

I felt every single gaze like a physical weight.

Someone near the back laughed. Nervous, high-pitched. Then silence swallowed it whole.

Liam appeared at my side so fast he must have been watching me, not the screen.

His hand closed around my arm. Tight.

"It's old." His voice was low and controlled, the voice he used in boardroom simulations, in arguments he'd already decided he was going to win. "It's from before us. Sloane—"

"Don't." The word came out barely above a whisper.

"Look at me." He shifted his body to block the room from view, tipping my chin up with two fingers. His eyes—brown, warm, the eyes I'd spent a year believing in—searched my face with something that looked a lot like desperation. "Look at me. I said I'd delete everything. Don't you trust me?"

I did look at him.

I stared at his perfect, careful face, the symmetry of it, the practiced concern in the lines around his mouth, and something in my chest went absolutely still.

I had never felt uglier than I did in that moment. Not because of the video. Not because of the two hundred witnesses. But because I was standing there cataloguing his features like I was trying to memorize something I was about to lose, and the dominant feeling rising through me wasn't heartbreak.

It was humiliation. The white-hot, suffocating kind.

He was still talking. Explanations stacking on top of each other, each one slightly different from the last. I stopped hearing the words.

The screen had gone dark—someone had finally cut the feed—but the room was buzzing now, that low electric murmur of a scandal finding its legs. I caught a flash of Mackenzie near the bar, her face chalk-white, her eyes already filling with the precise kind of tears designed to make her look like a victim.

I ripped my arm free.

Liam grabbed for me again. Missed.

"Sloane—"

I walked. I didn't run, because running would have given them something more to talk about, and I had approximately thirty seconds before my composure dissolved entirely. Through the ballroom, past the string quartet packing up their instruments, down the elevator with three strangers who stared at the floor and said nothing.

The parking lot was cold. October cold, the kind that gets into your throat.

I made it to the far end, past the valets and the row of black cars, before my body decided it was done cooperating. I bent over with my hands on my knees and heaved, chest convulsing, nothing coming up—just the dry, wretched mechanics of a body trying to expel something that lived too deep for that.

Mackenzie's voice. *Show me yours first.*

A year. I'd given Liam a year. I'd defended him to my mother, rearranged my schedule around his, worn the midnight blue dress because he'd picked it out and told me it made my eyes look extraordinary.

The cold bit at my bare shoulders. I straightened slowly, pressing the back of my hand to my mouth.

Headlights swept across the lot.

A black SUV rolled to a stop ten feet away, engine idling low and quiet. The window came down.

"Get in."

A man's voice. Deep. Unhurried. The kind of voice that didn't expect to repeat itself.

I turned.

I didn't know him. I was certain of that immediately—he wasn't one of the Kingston guests, wasn't anyone I'd seen working the door or the bar. He looked to be somewhere in his late twenties, dark hair, jaw sharp enough to cast its own shadow. But it was his eyes that stopped me. Grey. Pale and cold and direct, watching me through the open window with an expression I couldn't name.

Not pity. Something else entirely.

"Before he comes after you," the man said, and his gaze flicked briefly toward the hotel entrance behind me. "And trust me, Sloane. You don't want him to catch you alone."

He knew my name.

That should have sent me running in the opposite direction. Every sensible instinct I had was firing at once—stranger, danger, dark parking lot, get away—

But then I heard it. The hotel doors opening behind me. Liam's voice carrying across the lot, tight with controlled anger he hadn't bothered to disguise now that the audience was gone.

*"Sloane. Don't make this into something it's not."*

I looked back at the man in the SUV.

His grey eyes hadn't moved from my face. Patient. Almost like he'd already calculated this exact moment and found the outcome inevitable.

Something in my chest cracked—not the way it had cracked in the ballroom, all grief and heat. This was different. Quieter. The sound of a door swinging open in a room I hadn't known existed.

I grabbed the door handle.

I got in.

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