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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 2

The city was gray and humming when I hung up on Eric—on both of them, really. Their voices faded into a kind of static, the echo of Vivien’s soft laughter lingering longer than it should have. I stared at my phone for a second, thumb pressed so hard to the screen it left a mark. Then, as if the universe was determined to twist the knife, a notification popped up.

Vivien’s name. Her latest post.

I tapped it open with stiff fingers. A string of photos loaded, filtered warm and glossy: candlelight casting gold across a restaurant table, her head tilted against Eric’s shoulder, a perfect arc of her smile as she leaned into him. In the foreground, a little box—white velvet, ribboned, the kind of thing you buy when you want your affection to be both expensive and obvious. A caption floating beneath it, all lowercase intimacy: “with you, every day feels like a gift.”

The words hit harder than I wanted them to. I could almost smell the restaurant—roasted garlic, red wine, the sharp tang of roses on the table, all of it so familiar it made my stomach turn. I’d booked that place for Eric’s last birthday. I’d waited until midnight for him to show, only for his assistant to call and say he was stuck at the office with a client. I’d gone home and reheated leftovers, telling myself it was just bad timing, just busy season, just… something that didn’t mean what it so clearly meant.

I started walking, the weight of the cardboard box digging into my hip. Rain threatened, a sharp scent on the wind, but I didn’t care if I got soaked. Each block took me further from the office, but not far enough to leave it—or any of this—behind. I focused on the rhythm of my steps, the clatter of my shoes against the pavement. Still, memories clung like damp clothes.

Eric, with his easy charm and quick apologies. Eric, always promising tomorrow would be different. Eric, who’d insisted “all our money’s in the company, babe,” and left me to pay rent, groceries, date nights, everything that actually made a life. I’d told myself it was partnership. That I was supporting his dream. That it didn’t matter whose name was on the bill, because we were a team.

Until the day I checked my statements. Until I saw the charges—Prada, Cartier, dinners at hotels I’d never set foot in. The first time, I’d convinced myself it was a mistake. The second, I’d stayed up all night, eyes burning, scrolling through months of transactions. The third, I confronted him.

He’d stared at me, blank-faced. “Why are you looking at my card statements?”

“My card,” I’d corrected, the words scraping out of me. “You used my card.”

He’d gone cold, jaw tight. “So what? Are you keeping score now? I thought you said it didn’t matter. We’re married, Hayley. Or is that just until things get inconvenient for you?”

I’d tried to explain. He’d cut me off. Called me small. Jealous. Paranoid. We didn’t speak for a week after that. When he finally came back to our bed, he mumbled a half-apology into my hair: “I shouldn’t have used your card. I won’t do it again.”

Only, he always did. Sometimes for things he swore were for us—flowers, takeout, a new TV. Sometimes for things I never saw. Sometimes, I think, just to prove he could.

The bank was just ahead, glass doors reflecting the bruise-colored sky. I hesitated on the threshold, still clutching that box of desk junk like it might anchor me to something real. The inside was all antiseptic light and the faint hum of printers. I walked to the teller, keeping my voice even.

“I need to report a card lost. And freeze the account.”

The woman behind the glass didn’t ask questions. She just nodded, typing with chipped nails. “Do you want to transfer any remaining balance?”

I paused. “No. Just freeze it. Effective immediately.”

She slid a form across the counter. I signed my name and felt something settle inside me—a tiny, defiant spark. As if reclaiming this one thing, this one line of defense, could make a dent in everything else Eric had taken.

My phone buzzed in my pocket as I left the bank. I almost let it go, but habit dies hard. Eric’s number. I answered, forcing my voice flat.

“Sorry,” he said, and I could hear the faint whir of an airport behind him. “I was busy and didn’t see your calls. What’s up?”

“It’s fine now,” I said. My reflection flickered in the storefront beside me—hair mussed, eyes shadowed, a woman I barely recognized.

“Oh. Weird. Your card’s frozen.”

I didn’t give him the satisfaction of a pause. “I know. I froze it.”

A beat. “What’d you do that for? You bored or something?”

I let the silence stretch, then: “Didn’t you promise not to touch my card again?”

He didn’t answer at first. I could practically feel his annoyance, the calculation behind it. Then, a sigh—exasperated, theatrical. “Alright, I get it. You’re still mad I skipped the honeymoon. This is your way of punishing me. Honestly, Hayley, I thought you were more mature. Guess not.”

I pressed my finger to the bridge of my nose, fighting the urge to laugh. The old me would have argued, would have tried to fix things. Now, I just felt tired.

Back when the company was just starting, I got seriously sick. Surgery ran $10,000, and Eric had already dumped all his money into some flop of a project. He came to me crying, all apologies and empty hands. I just hugged him and said money didn’t matter—he could use mine. No questions asked. I thought giving him my heart would bring us closer. Turns out, I was just making it easier for him to take more.

“You know what, Eric?” I said quietly. “It’s not about the honeymoon. It’s about trust. And you broke it.”

He made a noise, somewhere between a scoff and a laugh. “Whatever. I’ll give you ten minutes. If you don’t do it, I’m not gonna let this slide.”

I didn’t flinch. I didn’t even sigh. I just opened my messages and typed: [You forgot your card? Ask your secretary. Or Vivien. This trip was for her project anyway. Let her pay for it.]

I hit send. Then I powered down my phone, the screen blinking to black. The world outside was sharp and real again. No more static. No more Eric in my ear, demanding, cajoling, taking.

I walked home in the gathering dusk, the box of my old life tucked under my arm. When I got inside, I dropped it by the door and went to my closet, pulling a suitcase from the top shelf. My hands were steady. For the first time in months, I wasn’t cleaning up his chaos.

Not anymore.

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