
Rejecting Billionaire's Plea
Chapter 1
I stood frozen in the doorway of our penthouse kitchen, my breath caught in my throat. The sight before me was so foreign it took several moments to process. Alexander—my husband of one year—was hunched over the stove, stirring a pot with careful attention I'd never seen him direct toward anything in our home before.
He hadn't noticed me yet. His sleeves were rolled up to his elbows, his normally perfect hair slightly disheveled. The scent of chicken broth, herbs, and something indefinably tender filled the air. I watched as he lifted the wooden spoon to his lips, tasted the soup, and then—most shocking of all—smiled. A genuine smile that transformed his face, softening the sharp angles I'd grown accustomed to.
It was an expression I had never seen directed at me.
"It smells wonderful," I said, stepping into the kitchen.
Alexander startled, his body tensing as he turned. The warmth in his eyes cooled instantly upon seeing me, replaced by the polite indifference I knew so well.
"Victoria. I didn't hear you come in." He set the spoon down and straightened, unconsciously reaching to fix his tie—a tie he wasn't wearing in the casual comfort of our home.
"Board meeting ran late," I explained, setting my purse on the counter. "I didn't know you cooked."
"I don't, usually." He turned back to the pot, his attention already drifting from me.
I moved closer, curious despite the knot forming in my stomach. "Special occasion?"
He hesitated, just long enough for me to know whatever came next would hurt.
"Charlotte's back from London," he said, his voice softening on her name in a way it never did with mine. "She's not well. I thought she could use something homemade."
Charlotte Mason. The name hung in the air between us like smoke. His first love. The woman he'd been forced to leave behind when our families arranged our marriage. I'd heard her name mentioned in whispers at social events, seen the way Alexander's expression would change at any reference to her.
"That's thoughtful of you," I managed, my voice steady despite the sudden hollowness expanding in my chest.
He didn't respond, just continued stirring with that same tender care. I watched his hands—hands that had never once prepared a meal for me, hands that touched me with respectful distance but never affection.
"Will you be home for dinner?" I asked, already knowing the answer.
"Don't wait up," he replied, not bothering to look at me again.
I nodded, though he couldn't see it, and left the kitchen. Each step away felt heavier than the last. In our bedroom, I changed out of my business attire with mechanical precision, hanging each piece in its designated place in our shared closet. His suits lined up beside my dresses—a perfect arrangement, like everything in our marriage. Orderly. Respectful. Empty.
I sat at my vanity, staring at my reflection. The woman looking back at me was Victoria Sterling, sole heir to Sterling Enterprises, a billion-dollar empire. She was poised, composed, successful. She had sacrificed her pride for an arranged marriage that would secure her position and finally earn her father's approval.
But what had it gotten her? A year of polite conversation over breakfast. Separate schedules. Separate lives. A husband who made chicken soup with love for another woman.
I rubbed the face of my mother's vintage watch, the smooth metal cool against my fingertips. The quiet ticking matched the thoughts crystallizing in my mind.
I would not be second choice. I would not compete for scraps of affection. I was Victoria Sterling—not just Alexander Whitmore's convenient wife.
The decision settled in me like a stone dropping into still water, ripples of certainty spreading outward. By midnight, I was in our home office, the lights dim except for my desk lamp. The phone call to Ava Chen, my lawyer, had been brief and decisive.
"Are you certain about this, Victoria?" Ava asked, setting the divorce petition before me in the small hours of the morning.
I thought of Alexander in the kitchen, tasting soup with a smile I'd never seen. I thought of the tenderness in his voice when he spoke Charlotte's name.
"Completely certain," I replied, taking the pen she offered.
My signature flowed across the page with surprising ease. Not the careful, measured script I used for business documents, but something freer. The first act of reclaiming myself.
As dawn broke over Manhattan, casting long shadows across our penthouse, I felt lighter than I had in a year. Tomorrow, Alexander Whitmore would discover that his convenient wife had found her dignity—and that it was worth more than all the hollow prestige their marriage had promised.
You may also like





