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My Mother Paid Me to Leave Him Novel Cover

My Mother Paid Me to Leave Him

The invitation arrived on heavy cream cardstock, embossed with gold lettering that caught the afternoon light streaming through my apartment window. Lucille Greene cordially invites you to celebrate her marriage to Frederick Carroll. I traced the gold letters with my fingertip, feeling nothing but the hollow obligation that had defined our relationship for as long as I could remember. Four years since I'd last seen Spencer, and now I was about to walk into his family's world—wearing a dress I'd borrowed from Nylah because I couldn't justify buying something new for a mother who'd abandoned me when I needed her most. The rooftop venue of The Celestial was draped in white peonies and crystal chandeliers that refracted Manhattan's skyline into a thousand glittering points. I arrived alone, clutching a small gift bag that felt inadequate in this ocean of wealth. The maître d' led me through tables of people whose jewelry could have paid off my medical school loans, and I felt the familiar tightness in my chest—the one that came whenever I remembered how far I was from the world I'd once shared with Spencer. I was halfway to my assigned seat when I turned, and there he was. Spencer Carroll stood at the head table beside a man I assumed was Frederick, his father. He wore a tailored charcoal suit that emphasized the broad shoulders and lean build that had filled out since college.
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Chapter 1

The invitation arrived on heavy cream cardstock, embossed with gold lettering that caught the afternoon light streaming through my apartment window. Lucille Greene cordially invites you to celebrate her marriage to Frederick Carroll. I traced the gold letters with my fingertip, feeling nothing but the hollow obligation that had defined our relationship for as long as I could remember. Four years since I'd last seen Spencer, and now I was about to walk into his family's world—wearing a dress I'd borrowed from Nylah because I couldn't justify buying something new for a mother who'd abandoned me when I needed her most.

The rooftop venue of The Celestial was draped in white peonies and crystal chandeliers that refracted Manhattan's skyline into a thousand glittering points. I arrived alone, clutching a small gift bag that felt inadequate in this ocean of wealth. The maître d' led me through tables of people whose jewelry could have paid off my medical school loans, and I felt the familiar tightness in my chest—the one that came whenever I remembered how far I was from the world I'd once shared with Spencer.

I was halfway to my assigned seat when I turned, and there he was.

Spencer Carroll stood at the head table beside a man I assumed was Frederick, his father. He wore a tailored charcoal suit that emphasized the broad shoulders and lean build that had filled out since college. His dark hair was styled back, revealing the sharp line of his jaw. But it was his eyes that stopped me cold—those same deep brown eyes that had once looked at me with such tenderness now regarded me with the precision of a scalpel and the warmth of winter ice.

He didn't smile. He didn't acknowledge that we'd once shared everything. He simply watched me with the detached interest of someone cataloging a stranger's features.

My heart hammered against my ribs as I forced myself to look away, to keep walking toward my seat. The woman beside me was discussing her Hamptons property as if it were a casual topic, and I nodded mechanically, wondering if Spencer could see the tremor in my hands.

The formal family introductions came after the ceremony, when Lucille was glowing with performative maternal affection. 'This is my daughter, Camilla,' she said, her hand resting briefly on my shoulder in a gesture that felt as rehearsed as the wedding vows. 'We've had our distance, but family is family.'

Spencer stepped forward, and I caught the subtle shift in his posture—a tightening, a preparation. When he extended his hand, I took it, and his grip was firm, professional, nothing like the way he used to hold me. 'Camilla,' he said, my name sounding like a foreign word on his lips. 'Congratulations on your residency.'

But his thumb pressed against my pulse point for one beat too long, and in that moment, I knew he felt it too—the electric current that had never died, despite four years of silence.

Frederick Carroll's assessment of me was immediate and clinical, delivered with the practiced smile of a man who had spent decades categorizing people by their utility. 'A doctor,' he said, as if confirming a data point. 'OB-GYN, isn't it?'

'Yes, sir,' I replied, the way I'd been trained to answer attending physicians.

'Commendable,' he said, though his tone suggested it was anything but. His eyes held mine for a moment too long, and I recognized the calculation—the rapid assessment of my social capital, my family connections, my place in his carefully constructed world. I had none of the things he valued.

The remainder of the reception passed in a blur of champagne toasts and carefully orchestrated conversation. I remained in excruciating proximity to Spencer, close enough to see the way his jaw tightened when Frederick introduced him to potential clients, close enough to notice how he'd become exactly the man his father had wanted—controlled, commanding, unreachable.

I left the wedding alone, sliding into the back of a cab with a sigh that felt torn from my chest. As we pulled away from the venue, I stared at the glittering Manhattan skyline and made a decision that would change everything.

The next morning, I called my leasing agent. 'I need to see the apartment across from 341 Tribeca Lofts,' I said, my voice steadier than I felt. 'Today, if possible.'

A week later, I was standing in the hallway of my new building, surrounded by cardboard boxes and the sound of Nylah's voice as she helped me unpack. 'This is insane, Camilla,' she said, setting down a box labeled 'Kitchen' with more force than necessary. 'You're moving across from Spencer Carroll? The Spencer Carroll you haven't seen in four years?'

'It's convenient,' I said, unpacking a stack of medical textbooks with mechanical precision. 'The location is good for the hospital.'

Nylah gave me a look that said she wasn't buying it. 'Right. Nothing to do with the fact that he's now your stepbrother and you're suddenly living in the same building.'

'Nylah—'

'No, you don't get to deflect with that clinical tone,' she interrupted. 'I was there, Camilla. I saw what you two had. And now you're playing house across the hall from him?'

I didn't answer, focusing instead on arranging my books on the shelf. The afternoon light was fading, casting long shadows across the hardwood floors as I reached for the last item in the box—a small wooden model of a house, intricately carved with tiny windows and a wraparound porch.

Spencer had made it for me during our junior year winter break, spending hours in his dorm room with a carving knife and sandpaper, creating a miniature version of the home we'd talked about building together someday. I ran my thumb over the tiny front door, remembering how his hands had looked then—steady, sure, creating something beautiful from raw materials.

I placed it on the bookshelf, half-hidden behind my medical textbooks, and stood looking at it for a long moment. Then I straightened a pen on my desk and went to make coffee, trying to ignore the way my hands were shaking.

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