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My CEO Husband Gave My Honeymoon Ticket to His Assistant Novel Cover

My CEO Husband Gave My Honeymoon Ticket to His Assistant

When my CEO husband Eric found out I handed a million-dollar project to his assistant Vivien, he thought his three-month cold war had finally broken me. He promised a honeymoon to Iceland—until Vivien threw a fit. Eric gave her my ticket and called it "work." I stared at their couple selfie online and said nothing. He thought I'd become the perfect, docile wife. Too bad I'd already quit. Too bad he'd signed the divorce papers without reading them. A month later, I walked into a competitor's office with double the salary. Eric saw me at an industry event, froze, and chased me down the hallway. "Hayley, I made a mistake. Come back." I smiled. "Mr. Sutton, I don't know you." He fell apart. I walked away. Some fires don't need water. They just need to burn out alone.
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Chapter 1

The resignation letter sat on Eric's desk for exactly nine minutes before it came back approved.

I know because I watched the clock.

I'd spent three weeks drafting it in my head—three weeks of talking myself into it, talking myself out of it, lying awake at 2 a.m. staring at the ceiling of the apartment I'd picked out because it was twelve minutes from his office. Three weeks, and it took him nine minutes to sign off on it without even a phone call.

Classic Eric.

I was still at my desk, pulling the last of my things into a cardboard box, when I heard them. My colleagues. Mia from accounting and that guy from legal whose name I could never remember, standing just close enough that I was clearly meant to hear.

"She's finally doing it," Mia murmured, not bothering to lower her voice. "Honestly? Probably for the best. You can't compete with Vivien."

I set my stapler in the box. Slowly. Deliberately.

"Vivien's been in his office every other day," the guy from legal added. "It was only a matter of time."

I turned around.

Both of them had the decency to look slightly caught, but not enough to actually stop.

"For what it's worth," Mia said, her smile too sympathetic to be sincere, "you gave it a good run."

I looked at her for a moment. Then I smiled—the kind of smile that doesn't reach your eyes because it isn't trying to.

"I'm not quitting out of heartbreak," I said. "I'm leveling up. Double the pay, killer benefits." I picked up the box. "But thanks for the concern."

I walked out before either of them could respond.

The elevator ride down was quiet. Twenty-two floors, and I stood in the back corner with my cardboard box and the faint smell of someone's leftover lunch, and I told myself I felt fine. I told myself I felt light. Free, even.

I almost believed it.

The afternoon air hit me when I stepped outside—cool, carrying the smell of rain that hadn't fallen yet. The street was loud in the way downtown streets always are, taxis and construction and someone's music bleeding out of a passing car. I shifted the box to my hip and started walking.

That's when my phone rang.

Eric's name on the screen.

I stopped walking. My thumb hovered over the answer button for one second, two, and then muscle memory took over—three years of picking up on the first ring, of dropping everything, of making myself available—and I answered.

"Hayley." His voice was clipped, already somewhere else in his head. "I sent you a file. Finish it and send it back within an hour."

No hello. No how are you. Just the task, the deadline, the expectation that I would comply.

I switched the phone to my other ear and kept walking. "What file?"

"Check your email. It's the Meridian account." A pause, and I could hear the faint sound of his office in the background—keyboard clicks, the low hum of the ventilation system I'd sat beside for three years. "It's work hours, Hayley Henderson. You do realize leaving your post means losing a full day's pay, right?"

He still had no clue I'd quit. Classic.

I pulled up my email one-handed, balancing the box against a storefront. The file was there. I opened the attachment, scrolling through it while he waited, and the moment I recognized the structure of the data—the formatting, the particular way the projections were laid out—my stomach dropped.

Meridian.

This was my project. Mine. I'd spent six weeks building the framework for it last quarter, and then Vivien had expressed interest, and Eric had suggested—gently, the way he always did things he knew weren't fair—that I let her take point on the presentation. "It'll be good for her visibility," he'd said. "You don't mind, do you?"

I hadn't minded. Or I'd told myself I didn't.

Now the numbers were wrong. The projections had gaps in them, places where someone had clearly tried to fill in data they didn't fully understand, and the whole third section was built on an assumption that would fall apart the moment anyone looked at it closely.

Vivien had taken the credit. Now there was a problem. And somehow, as always, it had found its way back to me.

"I see it," I said. My voice came out steadier than I felt.

"The client call is tomorrow morning. Whatever's wrong with it, fix it."

I looked up at the street. A woman walked past pushing a stroller. A cab honked at someone who'd stepped into the crosswalk too early. The city moved around me, indifferent and relentless.

I opened my mouth to tell him.

Three words. *I already quit.* Simple. Clean. Nine minutes of his time had already made it official—all I had to do was say it out loud.

"Eric—"

"One hour, Hayley." He was already moving on, already half out of the conversation. "I don't have time to—"

And then, in the background, her voice.

Soft. Slightly breathless. The kind of voice that knew exactly how it sounded.

"Eric, if Hayley doesn't want to, don't push her. I can handle it."

The shift was instantaneous. I heard it happen—the exact moment his attention moved.

"No." His voice dropped, warmed, became something I hadn't heard him use with me in a very long time. "You were up late last night. You should rest today."

A soft laugh from Vivien. Something murmured that I couldn't quite make out.

I stood on the sidewalk with my cardboard box and my phone pressed to my ear, and I listened to the two of them exist in a world that had quietly closed its doors to me, and I felt something settle in my chest—not quite pain, not quite anger. Something older and heavier than both.

I didn't say anything.

I just hung up.

The street noise rushed back in. I stood there for another moment, the box balanced on my hip, the phone still warm in my hand.

She hadn't even needed to be in the room to win.

She never did.

I started walking again. I didn't know where, exactly. Just forward. Just away.

She didn't even need to hear the rest. She already knew how this would end.

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