
The Second She Stopped Waiting
Chapter 3
The Airbnb sheets still smelled like lavender fabric softener when I woke up at 6:47 AM, sunlight streaming through unfamiliar blinds onto an unfamiliar ceiling. For exactly three seconds, I forgot where I was. Then reality settled back into place like a weight on my chest—not the crushing kind, but something surprisingly manageable. Solid. Real.
I'd slept eight hours straight. When was the last time that had happened?
My phone buzzed against the nightstand, displaying a calendar reminder in crisp white text: "Apex Analytics - First Day - 9:00 AM." Below it, a weather notification promised seventy-eight degrees and partly cloudy skies. Perfect Miami morning weather. Perfect for starting over.
I rolled out of bed and padded to the kitchenette, my bare feet silent against the cool tile floors. The Airbnb was a studio in Wynwood, all exposed brick and industrial fixtures, nothing like the sterile perfection of the Brickell penthouse I'd shared with Ryker. Here, the coffee maker was a basic Mr. Coffee machine, not the $3,000 La Marzocco we'd imported from Italy. But when I opened the cabinet and found the bag of cold brew concentrate I'd picked up yesterday, something inside my chest loosened.
I could make my own coffee. I could wake up in a space that was entirely mine, even if it was just rented by the night.
The Stanley tumbler I'd grabbed from the penthouse sat on the small counter, waiting. I filled it with ice, added the cold brew concentrate, and watched the dark liquid swirl against the stainless steel. No oat milk frother. No temperature control. Just coffee that tasted like freedom.
My reflection in the bathroom mirror looked different this morning. Same face, same green eyes, but something had shifted overnight. The tension I'd been carrying in my shoulders for months had disappeared, replaced by a clarity that made everything feel sharper, more defined.
I pulled on the Alo Yoga suit I'd bought three weeks ago—oatmeal-colored blazer and matching trousers that fit like they'd been tailored specifically for my body. The fabric felt substantial but soft, professional without being stuffy. I twisted my hair into a low bun, secured it with a tortoiseshell clip, and slipped on the thin gold hoop earrings that had been my grandmother's.
In the mirror, I looked like someone who belonged in a boardroom. Someone who could handle whatever Apex Analytics threw at her. Someone who definitely didn't look like she'd ended her marriage twelve hours ago.
The Uber dropped me off at 8:47 AM in front of a gleaming glass tower that stretched toward the cloudless sky. Apex Analytics occupied floors twenty through thirty, according to the directory in the lobby. I'd done my research—Kade Mercer had built the company from nothing five years ago, turning predictive analytics into an art form that Fortune 500 companies paid millions to access.
I was about to become part of that machine.
Panther Coffee sat across the street, its familiar red awning a splash of color against the corporate landscape. I had seven minutes before I needed to be upstairs, enough time for a proper cortado to complement the cold brew already coursing through my system.
The barista—a girl with intricate braids and a septum piercing—handed me the oat milk cortado in a ceramic cup that felt warm and substantial in my hands. The foam art was a perfect rosetta, delicate and temporary, beautiful because it wouldn't last.
I walked back toward the Apex building, savoring the rich, nutty flavor of the coffee and the weight of possibility settling in my chest. This was it. My first day in a job I'd earned entirely on my own merit, in a company that had nothing to do with Ryker's connections or influence.
That's when I saw the car.
A matte black Lucid Air Sapphire sat at the curb directly in front of the building's entrance, its sleek lines catching the morning light like a predator at rest. The vehicle was worth more than most people's houses, the kind of car that whispered rather than shouted about its owner's success.
As I approached the revolving glass doors, the Lucid's driver door opened with the soft whisper of precision engineering.
I was three steps from the entrance when it happened.
My shoulder connected with something solid and unyielding—a chest wrapped in what felt like the finest wool money could buy. The impact should have sent my cortado flying, should have left me stumbling backward in embarrassment on my first day.
Instead, a hand caught my elbow with practiced ease, steadying me before I could even process the collision. The coffee remained perfectly level in my grip, not a drop spilled.
I looked up.
Deep brown eyes met mine, framed by dark lashes and set in a face that belonged in a museum—all sharp angles and classical proportions. The man attached to those eyes wore a charcoal gray suit that had definitely been tailored on Savile Row, the kind of precision fit that only came from multiple fittings and obscene amounts of money.
Kade Mercer.
I recognized him from the company website photos, but those images had failed to capture the intensity that radiated from him like heat. He was taller than I'd expected, broader through the shoulders, with the kind of presence that made the busy street around us feel suddenly quiet.
His hand was still on my elbow. His eyes hadn't left mine.
"Sloane Whitfield." His voice carried a slight rasp, like he'd been up late or had just finished a difficult conversation. He said my name like he was confirming something he already knew, not like he was meeting me for the first time.
I straightened my spine, professional instincts kicking in despite the way my pulse had accelerated. "Mr. Mercer. Today isn't my interview—"
"It's your first day. I know." He released my elbow but didn't step back, maintaining that careful distance that felt both respectful and somehow intimate. "I passed your interview personally. Top scores across all metrics."
Something in his tone made me pause. This wasn't a casual encounter, wasn't him happening to arrive at the same time as his newest employee. This felt deliberate.
"I didn't come here to welcome you," he continued, reaching into his jacket and producing a sleek black document folder. He placed it in my free hand, his fingers brushing mine for just a moment. "I came because your first project just became a crisis."
The folder felt heavier than it should have, weighted with implications I couldn't yet understand. I looked down at it, then back up at his face, searching for clues in those dark eyes.
"Your former husband's fund pulled out of our Series C round at three AM this morning," Kade said, his voice dropping lower. "Forty-eight million dollars. Gone. The board meeting to address the situation starts in exactly"—he glanced at what looked like a Patek Philippe on his wrist—"sixty-seven minutes."
The words hit me like ice water.
Ryker.
Ryker had sabotaged this. My first day, my fresh start, my chance to build something entirely separate from our imploded marriage. He'd reached his fingers into this new life and tried to tear it down before it could even begin.
I took a slow, deliberate breath, tasting the lingering coffee on my tongue and feeling the Florida sun warm against my shoulders. Then I walked to the building's reception desk and set my cortado down on the marble surface.
"Where's the boardroom?" I asked, my voice steady as granite.
Kade's mouth didn't smile, but something shifted in his expression—a flicker of what might have been approval. "Twenty-seventh floor. Conference room A."
I followed him into the elevator, the black folder tucked securely under my arm. As the doors slid shut with a whisper of expensive machinery, I caught sight of Kade's reflection in the polished steel. His jaw was tight, a muscle jumping almost imperceptibly along the sharp line of his profile.
He was staring straight ahead at the closed doors when he spoke again.
"He knows you're here today. This isn't a coincidence."
The elevator climbed smoothly toward the twenty-seventh floor, each number lighting up in sequence on the digital display. Twenty-three. Twenty-four. Twenty-five.
The doors opened.
Conference room A stretched before us, floor-to-ceiling windows offering a panoramic view of Biscayne Bay. A long table dominated the space, surrounded by leather chairs that probably cost more than my monthly rent. Every seat was occupied.
Twelve pairs of eyes turned toward me as I stepped through the doorway.
I straightened my shoulders, lifted my chin, and walked into the room that would either make or break my new beginning.
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