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My Husband Served Divorce Papers After I Gave Birth Novel Cover

My Husband Served Divorce Papers After I Gave Birth

The penthouse was silent at eleven-thirty at night. I sat at the kitchen island, one hand resting on my swollen belly, the other holding a glass of water that had long gone cold. The marble countertop felt like ice beneath my fingertips, but I barely noticed. My attention was fixed on the two pieces of paper I'd discovered in the span of an hour, both of which now lay between my hands like evidence in a case I wasn't yet ready to build. The first was a hotel receipt from the Mandarin Oriental. Two nights, charged to our shared card, totaling $1,287. The second was Waylon's annual physical report, which he'd left open on his study desk. The bloodwork was flagged in red—elevated stomach-cancer risk, requiring immediate follow-up screening. I'd read each document twice. The receipt first, folded neatly in his coat pocket where he thought I'd never look.
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Chapter 3

Six weeks.

That was how long it took for the incision along my abdomen to fade from angry red to a thin pink seam I could press without flinching. Six weeks of bottles and night feeds, of one-handed emails answered at three in the morning, of learning the particular weight of a sleeping infant against my shoulder. Six weeks of the Tribeca penthouse going quiet around me in a way it never had when Waylon lived in it.

I didn't miss the noise.

The spare bedroom faced east. I'd had the movers haul out the guest bed the week I came home from the hospital and replaced it with a desk, two monitors, a filing cabinet, and a low gray bassinet in the corner where the morning light pooled but never fell directly on Thomas's face. That was the room I was sitting in at nine-fourteen on a Tuesday when I picked up the phone and called Diana Marsh.

She answered on the second ring.

"Regina." A pause, careful. "I heard about the baby. Congratulations."

"Thank you." I let the silence sit for half a beat. "Diana. Do you have twenty minutes?"

"I have as long as you need."

I could hear it already, underneath her voice — the particular flatness of a woman who had been holding something for a long time and was waiting to find out if she was finally allowed to set it down. I leaned back in my chair and looked at Thomas. His mouth was open in sleep, one fist curled near his ear.

"I'm opening an agency," I said. "Soho. I have the space, the capital, and the structure. I want you to come run the booking floor. Equity stake, title of your choosing, and a roster I'll build with you starting Monday."

There was a sound on the other end — not quite a laugh. Closer to an exhale.

"What's it called?"

"Apex One."

"When do you file?"

"This week."

Another pause. I could picture her — the corner office at Jadewood, the bookshelf I'd helped her pick out, the framed campaign tear sheets she'd matted herself because Waylon never authorized the budget. I didn't push. I let her arrive on her own.

"He's been letting her sit in on castings," Diana said finally. Her voice had dropped half an octave. "Mariana. She doesn't know what she's looking at. Last week she killed a booking for Lela because she said the girl's jawline was 'aggressive.' I had to call the client back personally and lie about a scheduling conflict."

"I know."

"He doesn't even argue with her, Regina. He just nods."

"I know," I said again, quieter.

We stayed on the phone for another forty minutes. I walked her through the cap table. The salary structure. The first six names I wanted to approach and the order in which I wanted to approach them. She asked two questions, both about non-competes. I had the answers ready. By the time we hung up, she had agreed to give Jadewood her notice on Friday.

I set the phone face-down on the desk. Thomas stirred in the bassinet, made a small dissatisfied sound, and settled again.

"That's one," I told him softly.

---

The Soho space was on the fourth floor of a converted warehouse on Greene Street. Brick walls, casement windows the length of my arm span, a freight elevator that opened directly into the reception area. I signed the lease on a Thursday. The incorporation documents went out the same afternoon. Apex One existed, on paper, by five p.m.

Within three months of the divorce, we were operational.

Diana came on the first of the month and brought four bookers with her, two of whom I had personally hired at Jadewood in the early years. The talent followed in a quieter, more deliberate trickle — a phone call here, a coffee there, a contract review for a model whose representation had quietly lapsed and never been renewed because Mariana hadn't bothered to track the renewal date. I did not poach loudly. I did not have to. The roster I had spent seven years building at Jadewood was, in the most literal sense, mine — built on relationships, on remembered birthdays, on the late-night emails I had answered when no one else would. They came because I called, and because when I called, I already knew their daughter's name and which agency in Paris had been circling them for a year.

The trades noted the departures. A two-line item in WWD about Diana's exit. A passing mention in Business of Fashion about a new Soho agency that had filed paperwork. No one had connected the pattern yet. That was fine. I wasn't trying to make a splash. I was trying to build something that would still be standing in ten years.

Meanwhile, across town, the pattern at Jadewood was becoming visible to anyone who cared to look.

I heard it in pieces. A casting director at a client lunch mentioned, almost apologetically, that Waylon had been forty minutes late to a fitting and hadn't apologized. A photographer I'd worked with for years told me Mariana had shown up to a shoot in heels she couldn't walk in and asked the lighting tech to "make the model look thinner." Diana came into my office one afternoon, set her coffee down, and told me Waylon had stopped showing up to Monday strategy meetings entirely.

"He looks bad," she said, not unkindly. Just factually. "He's lost weight."

I nodded. I didn't ask for more. I had warned him about his stomach once, at a marble kitchen island at eleven-thirty at night, and he had folded the report and walked past me up the stairs. I was not in the business of warning him twice.

I turned back to the casting board on my desk and the call sheet I was building for the meeting that afternoon.

---

The first major campaign landed in the second week of the agency's third month.

Maison Verre — French luxury, six-figure season contract, the kind of booking that announces an agency the way a thunderclap announces weather. Their lead buyer was a woman named Hélène, who I had taken to lunch in the spring of my second year at Jadewood and who had been sending me handwritten Christmas cards every December since. She called me on a Wednesday morning. The conversation took eleven minutes. The contract was countersigned by Friday.

The model who booked it was one of Diana's — a girl I had personally signed at nineteen and watched Mariana let drift for a year and a half without a single editorial placement.

The trade press ran a brief item on Monday morning. *Apex One Lands Maison Verre — New Soho Agency Posts First Major Win.* Three paragraphs. A headshot. A single line at the bottom noting that Apex One had been founded by "former Jadewood Models co-founder Regina Thomas."

My phone rang at nine-forty.

"Regina Thomas."

"Celeste Vong." The voice was warm and unhurried and exactly as I remembered it. "I'd like to do a profile."

I smiled, very slightly, at the bassinet across the room. Thomas was awake, watching the ceiling fan with the unfocused intensity of an infant who had not yet decided what ceilings were for.

"Celeste. It's good to hear from you."

"I'd like to come in next week. A long-form piece. Cover, if you'll give it to me."

"Not yet," I said. "Let's revisit after Fashion Week."

A pause. Then, slowly, the sound of a woman who had been in this industry long enough to recognize what she was hearing. "After Fashion Week."

"After Fashion Week."

"Alright, Regina." A small, appreciative laugh. "I'll be watching."

"I'd expect nothing less."

I hung up and sat for a moment with my hand resting on the phone. Outside the casement windows, Soho was loud with the particular noise of a Tuesday at midmorning — trucks unloading, a horn somewhere on Broome, the rattle of a delivery cart on the sidewalk four floors down.

I walked to the bassinet, picked Thomas up, and held him against my shoulder. He made a small sound and pressed his face into the side of my neck.

"We're building something," I told him.

The ceiling fan turned slowly above us. Down on Greene Street, the city kept moving. I stood there a long moment, holding my son, and let myself feel — just for that moment — the quiet, structural satisfaction of a foundation that was finally, indisputably, mine.

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