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The Second She Stopped Waiting Novel Cover

The Second She Stopped Waiting

Sloane Whitfield spent three years as the perfect wife to Ryker Voss — crypto hedge fund titan, Miami's most eligible bachelor, and the man who never once chose her. When she finally walks away, she leaves with nothing but her self-respect, her résumé, and a carefully locked heart. Her plan is simple: rebuild her career at one of Austin's fastest-rising analytics firms, forget the marriage ever happened, and never, ever be anyone's consolation prize again. Then Kade Mercer walks in. Ryker's most dangerous rival. The only man in every room who ever looked at Sloane like she was the most important thing in it. He's been waiting — patiently, strategically, devastatingly — for the moment she was free. But Sloane isn't interested in becoming someone else's obsession. She fought too hard for this version of herself to surrender it to a man with ocean-dark eyes and an agenda she can't read. As Ryker — too late, too broken, too desperate — begins to realize exactly what he threw away, Sloane must navigate her own hunger: the terrifying possibility that the love she'd given up on wasn't gone. It had simply been waiting for the right man. The Second She Stopped Waiting is a blazing enemies-to-lovers, second-chance romance about a woman who chose herself — and the man dangerous enough to make her question everything.
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Chapter 2

My fingers had barely grazed the drawer handle when Ryker moved. He stepped forward, his hand gripping the bathroom doorframe. His body filled the entire exit, blocking the door—and every escape route I’d had for the last three years.

The scent of Tom Ford Oud Wood drifted toward me. It was the woody, smoky fragrance I’d bought him for our first anniversary. Back then, I loved how it lingered on his collar, making me feel closer to him even when we were apart. Now, it made my stomach clench. The familiar warmth had twisted into something bitter and nauseating.

I pushed the drawer closed with deliberate slowness. The soft click echoed in the sterile space. When I turned to face him, our eyes met directly. No mirror between us this time. No reflection to soften the impact.

"What did you put in there?" His voice dropped lower than I’d expected, carrying a tone I recognized too well. It was that controlled rumble he used during heated board meetings—the one he used when his need to dominate kicked into overdrive.

I didn't answer. Instead, I picked up my phone from the marble countertop. My thumb swiped across the screen with practiced ease. The Threads notification was still there. Waiting. Taunting.

I opened the message.

The full text appeared in neat, sans-serif letters: "Did you tell her yet? Tonight we can finally stop hiding. I don't want to wait anymore, Ryker. You promised after the third anniversary—"

I kept my hand steady as I turned the screen toward him. The blue light cast sharp shadows across his face, highlighting his cheekbones and the stubble he’d been too distracted to shave this morning.

His expression didn't crumble. That was the part that truly shattered something inside my chest—not shame, not panic, not even surprise. Instead, his features settled into something that looked almost like relief. It was the exhausted surrender of someone finally backed into a corner they’d been avoiding for months.

"I was going to tell you afterward," he said. His voice was barely audible over the soft jazz still playing from the speaker.

"Afterward?" The word felt like a shard of glass between my teeth. Each syllable cut deeper than the last. "What does that mean, Ryker? After the anniversary? After you celebrated with me and then went to find her?"

My voice remained perfectly level, each word measured and controlled. I watched him flinch at the steadiness of it. My calm affected him more than screaming would have. His jaw tightened, and for a moment, I caught a glimpse of the man I’d fallen in love with—the one who used to look at me like I was the only person in the room.

Now, he looked at me like I was a problem he needed to solve.

I stepped sideways, sliding past him in the narrow space between his body and the vanity. The heat from his skin radiated through the air, and I had to fight the muscle memory that wanted to lean into his warmth. Three years of conditioning didn't disappear in a single moment, even when your world was imploding.

My fingers found the manila folder where I’d left it, hidden beneath the spare Egyptian cotton towels and travel-sized bottles of expensive serums. The paper felt substantial as I lifted it out and placed it squarely in the center of the marble countertop.

"These are divorce papers," I said, my voice cutting through the ambient music with surgical precision. "Drafted by a lawyer. My signature is already on them. I signed six weeks ago."

The words hung in the air like smoke—visible and suffocating. Ryker’s eyes dropped to the folder, then back to my face, searching for regret or a sign that this was a bluff.

He wouldn't find either.

My AirPods Pro slipped from my robe pocket as I turned, hitting the marble floor with a sharp, crystalline sound. I didn't bend to pick them up. They could stay there—another casualty of this moment, another piece of the life I was walking away from.

I moved toward the bathroom door, my bare feet silent against the heated floors we’d installed last winter. Behind me, I heard Ryker’s footsteps stop abruptly—then the soft rustle of papers being lifted.

I didn't turn around.

At the bedroom doorway, I paused, my hand resting on the cool metal of the handle. The silence stretched between us, filled only by the distant hum of the AC and the faint melody still drifting from the speaker. Somewhere in that silence was the sound of three years ending, of promises breaking, of a future dissolving like sugar in rain.

My phone buzzed against my palm—not Threads this time, but a calendar reminder. The notification appeared across the lock screen in clean, white text: "Tomorrow 9:00 AM — Apex Analytics interview confirmation."

I stared at those words. It was digital proof that I’d been preparing for this moment longer than I’d admitted. Since the Miami Beach hotel receipt. Since I noticed he never reached for my hand in public anymore. Since I understood that the distance between us wasn't temporary. It wasn't something we could fix with date nights and anniversary playlists.

For the first time since I’d seen that tattoo, the corner of my mouth lifted into something that belonged entirely to me. Not the smile I wore for his colleagues, not the practiced expression I used for his mother’s digs, not the patient look I perfected for his thinning excuses.

This smile was mine. Sharp-edged and genuine. It carried the weight of secrets I’d kept from myself and the promise of a future that finally felt worth living.

I stepped through the doorway and closed the door behind me, leaving Ryker alone with the papers that would set us both free.

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