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My Husband Gave Our Penthouse Key to His Ex Novel Cover

My Husband Gave Our Penthouse Key to His Ex

Wren Calloway didn't marry Sterling Crane for love. She married him for a deal — one that would secure the most critical merger in her family's real estate empire. All she needed was twelve months of a clean, uncomplicated marriage. Three days in, Sterling hands his "fragile" ex-girlfriend, Maisie Aldrin, the access code to their penthouse. He expects Wren to be understanding. Patient. Quiet. What Sterling doesn't realize is that Wren isn't the mild-mannered consultant he thinks she is. She's the hidden sole heir to the Calloway Trust — a billion-dollar real estate dynasty that owns the building they live in, the block it sits on, and the firm where Sterling's biggest client leases office space. Now Maisie is leaving lipstick on Wren's wine glasses, rearranging furniture in Wren's guest room, and texting Sterling with "emergencies" every night at midnight. Wren gave Sterling one chance to fix it. He chose Maisie. So Wren will dismantle everything — the penthouse, the marriage, and the career Sterling built — piece by piece. But when she starts pulling threads, she discovers Maisie isn't just a lovesick ex. She's running a con. And Sterling might not be the villain Wren thinks he is. By then, it might be too late to stop what she's already set in motion.
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Chapter 2

Sterling carried her bag himself.

I stood in the hallway and watched him do it — the way he angled his body to hold the door, the way his hand hovered near the small of her back without quite touching. Small gestures. The kind that live below the threshold of accusation.

Maisie Aldrin was thinner in person than in her photographs. Her cheekbones caught the light sharply, and her skin had that particular pallor that reads as fragile to anyone who isn't paying close attention. I was paying close attention. I always am.

Her eyes moved the moment she crossed the threshold.

Not to me. Not to Sterling. To the apartment itself — sweeping left to right across the open living room, the floor-to-ceiling windows, the art on the walls. A quick, systematic scan. The kind of assessment that takes in square footage and asset value before it takes in anything human.

Then she saw me, and the expression changed. Instantly. Like a lamp switching on.

"You must be Wren." Her voice was soft, slightly breathless. "Sterling's told me so much about you. I just — I want you to know how grateful I am. You didn't have to do this, and I—"

She stopped. Her hand came up to cover her mouth, and her eyes went glassy at the edges. The performance was technically excellent. The timing, the catch in the throat, the way she seemed to be fighting to hold herself together.

Sterling's hand found her shoulder.

He looked back at me over her head, and his expression said everything he didn't need to say out loud: *You see? You see how much she needs this?*

I smiled at them both.

"Please," I said. "Make yourself at home. If you need anything at all, just ask."

Then I turned and walked back to the bedroom, and I closed the door quietly behind me.

---

I sat at the desk with my laptop open and worked through three contracts that needed review before morning. The words were there. My hands moved. Some part of my brain processed the language with its usual precision while another part of it — quieter, more patient — waited.

I heard them at half past nine.

Laughter. Low and easy, the kind that comes from people who have a shared history they're not trying to hide.

I set my pen down.

The hallway was dark. I moved through it without turning on any lights, stopping just before the corner where it opened into the living room.

They were on the sofa. Sterling's laptop was open on the coffee table, but neither of them was looking at it. Maisie had a phone in her hand, tilted toward Sterling, and on the screen I could see photographs — the warm, overexposed tones of old travel pictures.

She was leaning against his shoulder.

"Remember the place near the Rialto?" she said. "We got so lost."

Sterling's voice, when he answered, was different from the voice he used with me. Softer. Less composed. "The landlord thought we were idiots."

"We *were* idiots." She laughed again, and the sound of it was completely unguarded in a way that her voice at the door had not been.

He didn't move away from her.

I stood in the dark hallway for exactly four seconds. Then I walked back to the bedroom, sat down at the desk, and opened the email from Julian.

The report had come in at 10:02 p.m. Twelve pages. Julian didn't write twelve pages unless he'd found something worth writing.

Maisie Aldrin. Twenty-nine. Columbia MBA, class of 2019. Three positions in real estate consulting over the past four years — Meridian Group, Ashford Capital, and a smaller firm called Vantage Advisory Partners. The employment history itself was unremarkable. What Julian had flagged were the footnotes.

Meridian Group: significant proprietary data breach six months after her departure. Two major acquisitions collapsed when competing bids came in with suspiciously precise figures.

Ashford Capital: internal audit revealed a pattern of document access in the weeks before her resignation. Nothing provable. No charges filed.

Vantage Advisory Partners: dissolved entirely eight months after she left. The principals had cited "irreconcilable strategic differences," which was the kind of language that meant something had gone badly wrong and no one wanted to say it plainly.

At the bottom of the report, Julian had added a single line in red:

*Pattern is consistent across all three instances. Recommend immediate escalation.*

I closed the laptop.

Outside the window, the city was doing what it always did — indifferent, relentless, lit up in every direction. I sat in the quiet of the bedroom and listened to the faint sound of voices from the living room, and I thought about the prescription bottle on the nightstand in the guest suite. The half-marathon photograph. The way Maisie's eyes had moved across my apartment like she was memorizing it.

I turned off the light and lay down.

I did not sleep.

---

The vibration pulled me out of the dark at 1:53 a.m.

Not Julian. The building's automated access system — a push notification I'd configured to alert me to any anomalous network activity on the shared infrastructure. I'd set it up eighteen months ago, when I first had the security system upgraded. Sterling had never asked why.

I sat up and read the alert.

Guest suite. WiFi connection established at 1:47 a.m. Device: unregistered. Routing: encrypted VPN. Session duration: twenty-three minutes. Status: active.

I sat with the phone in my hand and looked at the numbers.

A woman recovering from cardiac surgery. Alone in a guest room. Connecting to an encrypted VPN at two in the morning.

I got up.

The hallway was completely dark. Sterling's breathing behind me was slow and even — he slept the way people sleep when they don't believe anything is wrong. I moved past the bedroom door, past the linen closet, down the hall toward the guest suite.

The gap beneath the door was dark. No light at all.

But I stopped.

And I heard it.

Soft. Rhythmic. The almost-silent percussion of fingers on keys, moving quickly, pausing, moving again. Someone who typed fast and was trying not to be heard doing it.

I stood in the dark hallway outside the door of my own guest room, listening to Maisie Aldrin work in the middle of the night, and I did not knock.

I walked back to the bedroom. I picked up my phone. I opened the thread with Julian and typed:

*Escalate monitoring. I need the destination IP from her VPN session tonight. Full trace.*

The reply came in under forty seconds.

*Already running. Preliminary result: target server registered in the Cayman Islands. Holding company on record — Hargrove Maritime Holdings.*

My thumb stopped moving.

I read the name twice.

Hargrove.

I knew that name the way I knew my own pulse — not because I'd learned it, but because it had been there my entire life, woven into the history of the Calloway Trust like a splinter that never fully worked its way out. My grandmother had spent twenty years trying to acquire Hargrove Maritime. When that failed, she'd spent another decade trying to dismantle it. She'd died before she managed either.

I set the phone face-down on the nightstand.

In the guest room at the end of the hall, the typing had stopped.

The building was very quiet.

I lay back against the pillow and stared at the ceiling, and for the first time since Sterling had said *Maisie Aldrin* across a kitchen counter this morning, I felt something sharpen inside me — not anger, not fear. Something colder and more useful than either.

She hadn't come here to recover.

She'd come here for something that had nothing to do with Sterling at all.

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