
My Husband Threw Me Away for His First Love
My Husband Threw Me Away for His First Love Chapter 1
I stood in the center of the Nichols penthouse. The floor-to-ceiling windows showed the glittering skyline of the Upper East Side. It was the empire we built together. Or rather, the one I helped him take back.
Kane stood by the massive marble kitchen island. He wore a dark, perfectly tailored suit. His jaw was set tight. He looked every bit the ruthless billionaire he was now. He didn't look like the broken, penniless outcast I washed shirts for in our cramped Brooklyn studio five years ago.
"I'm marrying Irene," he said.
His voice was flat. It was his boardroom voice. The one he used to fire executives.
Irene Larson. His late cousin Ronan’s widow. The girl who put a Band-Aid on his bleeding knee when they were kids. The childhood obsession he never let go of.
I looked at him. My chest felt hollow, but my breathing stayed even. "When?" I asked quietly.
"The announcement goes out tomorrow." He slid a thick manila folder across the cold marble. "There is a settlement. It's generous. You won't have to work again."
He didn't look me in the eye. He looked at the folder.
I didn't scream. I didn't throw things. Crying was for women who still had a sliver of hope. I walked to the counter. The marble was freezing against my fingertips. I picked up the heavy gold pen lying next to the papers.
"Alyssa," he started. His voice cracked just a fraction. A tiny fracture in his perfect control.
I didn't let him finish. I didn't want to hear his excuses. I flipped straight to the last page. I signed my name. The pen scratched loudly in the dead quiet room. I didn't read the numbers. I didn't want his money.
I pushed the folder back toward him. "Keep it," I said.
I turned and walked down the long hallway to the master bedroom. I pulled my old, battered suitcase from the back of the massive walk-in closet. I packed only what I brought with me five years ago. A few plain sweaters, my old jeans, my paperback books. I left the designer dresses he bought me hanging in their bags. I left the diamond necklaces in their velvet boxes.
When I walked back out, he was still standing by the island. He looked frozen in place.
"Goodbye, Kane," I said.
I didn't wait for an answer. I walked out the heavy oak door and let it click shut behind me.
The private elevator was empty. The walls were lined with polished steel. The doors slid shut, sealing me in. I looked at my reflection. My face was perfectly calm. My posture was straight. But down by my sides, hidden in the deep pockets of my wool coat, my hands were shaking. They trembled so hard my knuckles ached. I shoved them deeper into the fabric and closed my eyes.
An hour later, I was in the West Village. Rosie Jordan’s guest bedroom smelled like lavender and old paper. Rosie was my best friend. She was a ruthless litigation attorney in Manhattan. She knew how to fight dirty. Right now, she just looked deeply worried.
I sat on the edge of the narrow bed. I stared blankly at the wall.
Rosie walked in and handed me a large glass of red wine. "Drink," she ordered softly.
I took the glass. I didn't drink. I just held it by the stem. The dark red liquid caught the light from the small bedside lamp.
"He did it, didn't he?" Rosie asked. She sat in the armchair across from me. She pulled her knees up to her chest. She had warned me about Kane from the start. She knew he was still obsessed with Irene.
"He's marrying her," I said. My voice sounded detached. Like I was talking about a movie I just watched.
Rosie closed her eyes. "That bastard. After everything you did. Every humiliating investor dinner. Every time you swallowed your pride for him. You built him, Alyssa."
"I know."
"I'll ruin him," she said fiercely. Her lawyer instincts were kicking in. "I'll tie him up in court for a decade."
I finally looked at her. I set the untouched wine on the nightstand. The glass made a soft clink against the wood.
"No," I said.
"Alyssa, you can't just let him walk away with her."
"I need you to listen to what I'm going to do," I said. My voice was low. It didn't shake at all. "And I need you not to talk me out of it."
Rosie stared at me. For the first time since we met in college, she looked genuinely afraid of me. The sharp-tongued lawyer was completely silent. She saw the absolute, terrifying stillness in my eyes.
"What are you going to do?" she whispered.
"I'm not going to destroy his company," I said. "I'm not going to take his money. That's too easy."
I looked down at my hands. They had finally stopped shaking. The weakness was gone. Only a cold, hard clarity remained.
"He left me because he thinks Irene is an angel," I explained. "He thinks she's his savior. He doesn't know how to love. He only knows how to obsess over a fantasy."
Rosie nodded slowly. "So?"
"So, I'm going to show him who she really is. And I'm going to make him watch." I met Rosie's gaze. "I'm going to make him feel exactly what I felt today. The helplessness. The desperation. The absolute loss of control."
"How?"
"By walking away," I said simply. "By letting Irene hang herself with her own vanity. And by making sure Kane realizes he threw away the only real thing in his life, right when he can never have it back."
Rosie let out a long, shaky breath. "You're going to break him."
"No," I said. A slow, cold smile touched my lips. "I'm going to let him break himself."
My Husband Threw Me Away for His First Love of Contents
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