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Rejecting the Billionaire's Plea Novel Cover

Rejecting the Billionaire's Plea

The mahogany desk gleamed under the harsh fluorescent lights of Patterson & Associates, its polished surface reflecting the stack of divorce papers that would officially end my seventh marriage to Wyatt Dixon. Seven times. The number should have felt absurd, embarrassing even, but as I lifted the Mont Blanc pen—the same one Wyatt had given me for our third anniversary—I felt nothing but a strange, hollow calm. "Mrs. Dixon, are you certain you want to proceed?" Mr. Patterson's voice seemed to come from underwater, distant and muffled. His weathered face creased with concern as he watched me hover the pen over the signature line. "Perhaps you'd like to take more time to consider—" "I'm certain." The words came out steady, final. No tremor in my voice, no tears threatening to spill. Just certainty.
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Chapter 2

The concert tickets lay on the marble coffee table like two pieces of evidence—proof of promises that had already crumbled to dust. I picked up the elegant black cardstock, running my thumb over the embossed gold lettering: *Carnegie Hall - Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2 - 8:00 PM*. The same concert Wyatt had surprised me with tickets for last month, his eyes bright with the kind of enthusiasm he usually reserved for Sienna's returns.

"It'll be perfect," he'd said then, pulling me close in this very living room. "Just you and me, like old times."

Old times. As if we'd ever had those.

My phone buzzed against the glass table, and I glanced at the screen without really seeing it. Another notification, another piece of the world continuing to spin while mine had ground to a halt. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, Manhattan glittered with its usual indifference, twenty stories below my suspended reality.

I should change out of this dress—the midnight blue silk I'd chosen specifically for tonight. It hugged my curves in all the right places, the way Wyatt used to notice before his attention became a finite resource, carefully rationed and never quite enough. But instead, I found myself sinking deeper into the Italian leather sofa, clutching the tickets like lifelines to a sinking ship.

The clock on the mantle chimed seven-thirty. In thirty minutes, the lights would dim at Carnegie Hall, and Rachmaninoff would fill the air with his heartbreaking beauty. The same music that had played during our third wedding—back when I still believed in the poetry of second chances.

My phone lit up again, this time with a push notification that made my blood freeze: *Page Six: Wyatt Dixon and Former Flame Sienna Gray Spotted at Le Bernardin*.

The photo loaded with cruel efficiency. There they were, seated at what I recognized as the restaurant's most intimate corner table—the one that required a three-month reservation. Sienna's platinum hair caught the candlelight like spun silk, and her hand rested on Wyatt's forearm with the casual possession of someone reclaiming territory. His smile was the one I'd been chasing for seven marriages, genuine and unguarded in a way that made my chest hollow out completely.

The caption read: *"Rekindled romance? Billionaire businessman Wyatt Dixon enjoys an intimate dinner with first love Sienna Gray at Manhattan's most exclusive restaurant. The pair seemed completely absorbed in each other, ignoring other diners as they shared champagne and whispered conversations."*

I stared at the screen until the words blurred, my fingers trembling against the glass. Seven-forty-five. The concert would begin in fifteen minutes, and here I sat, watching my husband wine and dine another woman while our tickets grew cold between my fingers.

Something shifted inside me then—not the familiar rage or the desperate hurt that usually accompanied these moments. Something quieter. Emptier. Like the sound of air escaping from a punctured balloon.

I stood, smoothing down my dress with mechanical precision, and walked to the bedroom. In the mirror, I looked exactly like what I was—a woman dressed for an evening that would never come. The diamonds at my throat caught the light, a anniversary gift from our fifth marriage, back when I still believed his apologies meant something.

The Uber ride to Lincoln Center passed in a blur of city lights and muffled traffic. I clutched my single ticket—the other one abandoned on the coffee table like a discarded promise—and watched couples hurry past on the sidewalk, their faces bright with anticipation.

Carnegie Hall rose before me like a temple to everything I'd lost, its elegant facade glowing against the October sky. Well-dressed patrons streamed through the entrance in pairs, their laughter and conversation creating a symphony of normalcy I could no longer access.

I joined the queue, my heels clicking against the marble steps, and tried to ignore the pitying glances from the ushers. A woman alone at Carnegie Hall wasn't unusual, but something in my face must have given me away—the particular brand of loneliness that comes from being abandoned rather than choosing solitude.

As I handed over my ticket, my phone buzzed with a new notification. Another photo, this one geo-tagged at Carnegie Hall itself. My breath caught in my throat as the image loaded: Wyatt and Sienna entering the very same venue, her arm linked through his, both of them radiant under the golden lights of the lobby.

The usher was saying something about my seat, but the words felt distant and strange. I followed him down the red-carpeted aisle in a daze, my eyes scanning the crowd for familiar faces. They were here. In the same building, breathing the same air, sharing the same music that was supposed to be ours.

I found my seat—orchestra section, row H, seat 12. The empty seat beside me gaped like an open wound, and I placed my purse there carefully, as if I could somehow fill the void with expensive leather and determination.

The lights dimmed, and Rachmaninoff's opening notes filled the hall with their haunting beauty. Around me, couples leaned into each other, sharing programs and whispered observations. Somewhere in this same room, Wyatt was probably explaining the composition to Sienna, the same facts he'd once shared with me during happier, more naive times.

The music swelled, and with it came the tears I'd been holding back all evening. They fell silently, steadily, as the pianist's fingers danced across the keys with the kind of passion I'd spent seven marriages trying to inspire in my husband. Each note seemed to pierce deeper, until I was crying not just for tonight, but for every concert, every dinner, every moment I'd spent waiting for a man who was always looking over my shoulder for someone else.

By intermission, my phone was flooded with notifications—more photos, more headlines, more evidence of my irrelevance spreading across social media like a virus. *"Wyatt Dixon's romantic evening takes a cultural turn"* accompanied a photo of them sharing champagne during the break, Sienna's head thrown back in laughter at something he'd whispered in her ear.

I sat through the second half in a trance, letting Rachmaninoff wash over me like a funeral dirge for the woman I used to be. The woman who would have called him screaming, who would have stormed out and made a scene, who would have fought for scraps of attention like a starving dog.

But that woman was gone, dissolved somewhere between the divorce papers and this moment of crystalline clarity. As the final notes faded and the audience erupted in applause, I remained seated, watching couples gather their things and plan their after-concert drinks.

My phone lit up one final time: a video posted to Sienna's Instagram story, showing Wyatt helping her with her coat as they prepared to leave. The caption read simply: *"Perfect evening with my favorite person."*

I closed my eyes and let the last of my tears fall, each one carrying away another piece of the woman who had believed in happy endings and second chances. When I opened them again, the hall was nearly empty, and I was alone with the ghosts of what might have been.

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