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My Exes Tried to Ruin Me for Rejecting Them Novel Cover

My Exes Tried to Ruin Me for Rejecting Them

The applause washed over me like a wave, but I didn't need it. I'd never needed the validation. Standing at the podium in the grand ballroom of the Manhattan Ritz-Carlton, I accepted the crystal award with the same measured composure I brought to every boardroom. My company's meteoric rise was the talk of Wall Street—a woman who'd built an empire from the ashes of her own humiliation. The irony wasn't lost on me. 'Mavis Wallace,' the host announced, 'for visionary leadership and unprecedented growth in the technology sector.' I scanned the crowd as I took my place at the podium. A sea of New York's elite—investors, CEOs, influencers—all watching to see if I'd crumble under the weight of their scrutiny. I didn't. I never would again. 'Thank you,' I said into the microphone, my voice carrying clearly across the hushed room.
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Chapter 3

The Hamptons gala was the kind of event that existed to remind people of their place in the world. White tents strung with warm light. Champagne that cost more than a car payment. Women in gowns that whispered old money, men in suits that shouted new power. I wore black — sharp, architectural, no jewelry except the small diamond studs I'd bought myself the day I signed my first major contract. A reminder. Always a reminder.

I'd known Zayne would be here. His publicist had confirmed his attendance three days ago, and I'd spent those three days deciding exactly how this would go.

He found me near the terrace, right on schedule. That was the thing about Zayne — he always believed he was the one doing the finding.

'Mavis.'

His voice was low, warm, textured like velvet. I'd once thought that voice was the most honest thing about him. Now I knew it was the most rehearsed.

I turned slowly. He looked exactly as the cameras loved him — tall, effortlessly handsome, his dark eyes carrying that particular intensity he deployed like a spotlight. He was wearing it now, that look. Aimed directly at me.

'Zayne,' I said. 'You look well.'

'You look—' He paused, letting the pause do the work. 'You look like you always did. Like the only person in the room worth looking at.'

Around us, conversations continued. Glasses clinked. But I felt the subtle shift — the way nearby clusters of people angled slightly toward us, the way attention moved like water finding a crack. New York's elite had excellent peripheral vision.

He stepped closer. Close enough that I could smell his cologne — cedar and something sweet underneath, something almost medicinal. 'I've thought about you,' he said. 'More than you'd believe.'

'I'd believe quite a lot,' I said.

He smiled at that, reading it as an opening. 'I made mistakes. I know that. But what we had—' He shook his head slowly, the gesture practiced and perfect. 'That was real, Mavis. Whatever you think now, that was real.'

I let him finish. I let the silence sit for a beat after his last word, long enough to feel like consideration.

Then I said, 'Tell me something, Zayne. When you looked at me — really looked at me — what did you see?'

He blinked. The question wasn't what he'd prepared for. 'I saw you,' he said. 'I saw—'

'You saw Cora Evans,' I said.

The name landed like a stone dropped into still water. I watched the ripple move across his face — the micro-flinch, the rapid recalibration, the smile that tried to reassemble itself and didn't quite make it.

'I don't know what you—'

'Every tender thing you ever said to me,' I continued, my voice conversational, unhurried, 'I've spent a long time thinking about. The way you'd go quiet sometimes, mid-sentence, like you'd lost the thread. The way you'd look at me and then look away, like the view disappointed you. The way you said my name — always a half-second late, like you were correcting yourself.'

I wasn't raising my voice. I didn't need to. The conversations nearest to us had gone quiet. I could feel it happening, the way a room holds its breath.

'You weren't in love with me,' I said. 'You were in love with a woman who wouldn't let you own her. And I was the understudy. Every word you said to me was a line you'd written for someone else.'

For a moment, Zayne Herrera — the man who had made a career out of performing emotion — had no performance left. His jaw tightened. Something hot and ugly moved behind his eyes.

'You don't know what you're talking about,' he said, and his voice had lost its velvet. It was flat now. Hard.

'I know exactly what I'm talking about.' I held his gaze. 'And so does everyone in this room who just heard me say it.'

The crack was brief. A flash of pure rage — his hand tightening around his champagne glass, his shoulders going rigid, the mask slipping just far enough to show what lived underneath it. Then he caught himself. Smoothed his expression. Stepped back.

But the room had seen it. That was the thing about New York's elite — they forgot nothing, and they talked about everything. By morning, the gossip columns would have a field day.

I turned and walked away before he could find his lines again.

---

Three days later, my phone buzzed with an unknown number.

*I need to talk to you. Not about him. About what I found. — S*

I stared at the initial for a long moment. Then I typed back: *Café Mirabel. Tuesday. Noon.*

Selena Mills arrived seven minutes late, which told me she'd been outside for at least ten, working up the nerve. She looked polished — she always looked polished, it was practically a reflex — but her eyes were doing something her foundation couldn't cover. That particular flatness that comes after you've cried yourself dry and there's nothing left but the anger.

She sat down across from me and didn't say anything right away. She picked up the menu, set it down, picked up her water glass.

'I found a burner phone,' she said finally. 'In his jacket. He left it in the coat closet and I—' She stopped. 'I wasn't snooping. I want you to know that.'

'I don't care either way,' I said.

She looked up at that. A flicker of something — offense, maybe, or relief that I wasn't going to make her perform innocence.

'The messages were to Zayne,' she said. 'Not — not what you'd think. They were planning something. I don't know all of it. But they mentioned your company. They mentioned leverage.' Her voice was steady but her hands weren't. 'They mentioned Erik Dixon.'

I kept my face neutral. Inside, something clicked into place — a piece I'd been waiting for.

'How long have you known something was wrong?' I asked.

She looked out the window. A cab honked somewhere on the street. 'Months,' she said quietly. 'I just didn't want to—' She stopped again.

'Didn't want to be wrong,' I finished. 'Or didn't want to be right.'

Her jaw tightened. 'I'm not here to be psychoanalyzed.'

'No,' I agreed. 'You're here because your pride is in pieces and your anger needs somewhere to go.' I set down my coffee cup. 'I'm not going to tell you I forgive you, Selena. That's not what this is. But I'll tell you something true, if you want it.'

She looked at me. Her eyes were wary, brittle, but underneath that — hungry.

'Jaxson Roberts doesn't love people,' I said. 'He acquires them. He kept you because you were useful. He's pulling back because he's found a new use for his energy, and it has nothing to do with love and everything to do with ego.' I paused. 'You were never his girlfriend. You were his latest asset. And assets get liquidated.'

The silence between us was long. Outside, the city moved at its usual indifferent pace.

Selena set down her water glass very carefully, like she was afraid of what she'd do if she wasn't deliberate about it. 'What do I do with what I found?' she asked.

'Nothing yet,' I said. 'Keep it safe. Keep it quiet.' I met her eyes. 'And the next time he does something that confirms what you already know — write it down. Date, time, exactly what happened. Every detail.'

She studied me for a moment. 'You've been preparing for this.'

'I've been preparing for a lot of things,' I said.

She left first. I stayed and finished my coffee, watching the door close behind her. I opened my notebook to the page with three names on it and added a fourth line — not a name, but a word.

*Alliance.*

They were moving faster than I'd expected. But then, desperate men always did.

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