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Nora's Revenge on Her Ex Novel Cover

Nora's Revenge on Her Ex

The condensation on the bottle of Veuve Clicquot was ruining the mahogany finish of the dining table, but I didn’t care. Tonight was the finish line. After three years of scrimping, three years of eating ramen so Nathan could eat steak, and three years of funding a law degree on a jewelry designer’s erratic income, Nathan Jones had passed the bar. He had the job at the top-tier firm in Manhattan. We had made it. The lock tumbled. I smoothed the skirt of the vintage dress I’d altered myself, forcing a smile onto lips that felt tight from anxiety. I expected him to burst in, lifting me off the ground in a spin of relief and cheap cologne. Instead, the door swung open slowly. Nathan stood there, looking devastatingly handsome in the charcoal suit I had put on my credit card last month.
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Chapter 3

The smell of fresh paint and white lilies filled the air of 5th and 52nd. It was a scent that burned the nostrils, sharp and expensive. I stood in the center of the showroom, turning slowly. The space was no longer a vacant echo chamber; it was a temple of minimalism. I had stripped away the heavy moldings and gold leaf of the previous tenant, leaving behind raw concrete floors and display cases of black matte steel. The jewelry didn’t need to compete with the room. The jewelry was the room.

“It’s intimidating,” Chelsea said, walking up beside me. She had flown in from Seattle that morning, her eyes wide as she took in the vaulted ceilings. “In a good way. It feels like… armor.”

“That’s the point,” I said, adjusting the lighting on the center display. inside sat the flagship piece of my new collection, *Resilience*. It was a choker of platinum thorns, interspersed with raw, uncut diamonds that caught the light and fractured it.

In the corner, sitting in a high-backed velvet chair like a king on a throne, was Emerson. He hadn’t spoken a word in an hour, but his eyes tracked everything. He was waiting for me to fail. Or perhaps, waiting to see if his investment would yield a return.

The bell above the door chimed. A woman swept in, followed by a trailing assistant holding a stack of boxes. It was Mrs. Van Der Hoven, a name that struck fear into the hearts of Madison Avenue sales associates. She made a beeline for the *Resilience* choker, peering at it through oversized sunglasses.

“Uncut stones?” she sniffed, her voice echoing in the quiet shop. “It looks unfinished. Lazy.”

Emerson shifted in his chair. I felt the weight of his gaze.

I walked over, keeping my hands clasped behind my back. “Not unfinished, Mrs. Van Der Hoven. Unbroken.”

She paused, looking at me over the rim of her glasses. “Excuse me?”

“Cut diamonds are beautiful because they’ve been shaped to reflect light,” I said, my voice calm and authoritative. “But raw diamonds are stronger. They haven’t been whittled down to please the eye. They exist in their natural state of invincibility. This piece isn’t for a woman who wants to sparkle. It’s for a woman who has survived the pressure and came out harder than rock.”

Mrs. Van Der Hoven went still. She looked at the necklace, then back at me. Slowly, she removed her sunglasses.

“Wrap it up,” she said. “And I want the matching cuffs.”

As she swiped her black card, I glanced at the corner. Emerson offered a single, almost imperceptible nod.

***

A week later, the adrenaline of the opening had settled into a steady hum of productivity. I was behind the counter, reviewing the inventory logs, when I saw them through the floor-to-ceiling glass.

Nathan and Lainey.

They were walking down 5th Avenue, but they weren't the power couple they had pretended to be in my Seattle living room. Nathan looked grey. The crispness of his suit was gone, replaced by the rumpled, frantic energy of a junior associate drowning in billable hours. He was arguing with Lainey, gesturing sharply at the shopping bags swinging from her arms. Lainey looked sullen, clutching a designer bag that I knew, with absolute certainty, had been purchased on credit.

They stopped in front of the store. I saw the moment of recognition hit Nathan. He looked up at the signage—*Russell Jewelry* in stark, backlit letters—and his jaw dropped.

Lainey said something, laughing, and pulled him toward the door. They expected a kiosk. They expected a failure.

The door opened. The climate control system swallowed the street noise instantly.

“Well,” Lainey said, her voice shrill in the quiet elegance of the boutique. She spun around, taking in the concrete and diamonds. “It’s a bit… cold, isn’t it? Very industrial.”

Nathan didn't speak. He was staring at the price tag inside the nearest display case. It was five times the amount of the debt he was currently paying off to me.

“Can I help you?” I asked. I didn’t come out from behind the counter. I stood tall, my hands resting on the cool glass.

Nathan’s head snapped up. “Nora. We… we were just in the neighborhood.”

“Shopping,” Lainey added quickly, lifting her bags as if they were a shield. “Nathan just got his bonus. We thought we’d see how your little project was going.”

“My project is thriving,” I said, my eyes flicking over Nathan’s frayed cuffs and the dark circles under his eyes. “Though it looks like the city is taking its toll on you, Nathan. The interest rates on private loans can be suffocating, I hear.”

Nathan flinched. The color rose in his cheeks, a mix of anger and shame. “We’re doing fine, Nora. Better than fine. We’re building a life.”

“Is that what you call it?” I looked at Lainey, then pointedly at the new bag she was clutching. “It looks like you’re building debt.”

Lainey stepped forward, her face twisting. “You’re just jealous. You’re alone in this icebox, and we have—”

“Security,” I said softly.

The large man in the suit who had been standing discreetly by the entrance stepped forward. He didn’t touch them; he just occupied the space, a silent wall of muscle.

“Please keep an eye on the merchandise while these two are browsing,” I said, my voice bored. “We can’t be too careful with walk-ins.”

The implication hung in the air like smoke. I wasn't treating them as rivals. I was treating them as shoplifters.

Nathan looked around the store, seeing the wealthy clientele watching them with mild distaste. He realized in that second that he wasn't the protagonist of this city. He wasn't even a player.

“Let’s go,” Nathan muttered, grabbing Lainey’s elbow. His grip was too hard.

“But I wanted to—”

“Now, Lainey!” he hissed.

They retreated out the door, stumbling slightly in their haste to escape my gaze. I watched them disappear into the crowd, small and insignificant against the backdrop of the empire I was building. I didn't feel angry. I checked my watch, picked up my pen, and went back to work.

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