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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 4

Twelve pairs of eyes turned toward me as I stepped through the doorway, but only one pair made my blood freeze in my veins.

Marcus Holt sat at the far right end of the conference table, a crisp white pocket square folded precisely in his suit jacket. Ryker's personal attorney. The man who'd handled our prenup, who'd been copied on every major financial decision we'd made as a couple, who knew exactly how much damage he could inflict with the right legal maneuver.

It took me exactly 0.3 seconds to understand what this meant.

Ryker hadn't just pulled funding. This was a hostile takeover attempt.

I felt Kade settle into position half a step to my left, close enough that I could sense the controlled tension radiating from his frame. He didn't look at me, but his presence felt like a shield wall—solid, immovable, protective.

I opened the black folder with deliberate calm, my eyes scanning the numbers that would have made most people's hands shake. Series C withdrawal: $47 million. Reason cited: "Data compliance vulnerabilities."

I recognized that language immediately. It was Ryker's signature move—weaponize regulatory fears, create artificial urgency, then swoop in with a lowball acquisition offer when the target company was bleeding and desperate.

The folder closed with a soft whisper of expensive paper. I walked toward the presentation screen at the head of the room, my heels clicking against polished concrete. No one had introduced me. I didn't need them to.

"Good morning," I said, my voice cutting through the tension like a scalpel. "I'm Sloane Whitfield, and I'm here to explain why everything you just heard about data compliance vulnerabilities is strategically fabricated bullshit."

A silver-haired woman in the center seat—board chair, based on her positioning—leaned forward slightly. Her expression shifted from skeptical to intrigued in real time.

I picked up a black marker from the whiteboard tray, uncapped it with a sharp pop. "This will take twenty-two minutes. No PowerPoint. Just math."

The marker squeaked against the whiteboard as I wrote the first number: $47M. Below it, I added: Withdrawal timing: 3:00 AM EST.

"Compliance investigations don't happen at three in the morning," I said, drawing a line between the two figures. "Coordinated financial attacks do."

I turned to face the room, marker still in hand. Marcus had his phone out, typing rapidly. Probably texting updates to Ryker in real time.

Good. Let him watch this.

"Second number." I wrote 18 on the board. "Eighteen months ago, I conducted due diligence on a fintech startup for Meridian Capital. Same compliance language. Same artificial urgency. Same attorney." I pointed the marker directly at Marcus without breaking eye contact with the board. "That company was acquired for thirty-seven percent below market value six weeks later."

The room had gone completely silent except for the soft scratch of my marker against the whiteboard. I could feel Kade's attention like a physical weight, though he remained perfectly still in my peripheral vision.

"Third number." I wrote a longer figure: $127,000,000. "Apex's actual liquid asset value without Series C funding, based on current revenue streams and confirmed contracts through Q2 next year."

Below that, I added three names: Goldman Sachs, Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital.

"Alternative funding sources. All three have expressed preliminary interest based on Apex's Q4 performance metrics. I can have term sheets by Friday."

I capped the marker and set it down on the tray with deliberate precision. The click echoed in the silent room.

Marcus finally looked up from his phone, his pale blue eyes meeting mine across the polished table. He'd aged since I'd last seen him—more gray at his temples, deeper lines around his eyes. The stress of managing Ryker's increasingly aggressive business tactics was apparently taking its toll.

"Ms. Whitfield," he said, his voice carrying that particular Harvard Law inflection that made every word sound like a closing argument. "How long have you been employed by Apex Analytics?"

I glanced at my watch—the simple gold Cartier that had been my grandmother's, not the diamond-encrusted Bulgari that Ryker had given me for our second anniversary.

"Approximately forty-five minutes," I replied. "Next question."

A laugh escaped from someone at the far end of the table—quickly stifled, but audible enough to shift the room's energy. Marcus's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly.

"And you believe you're qualified to speak to Apex's long-term financial stability based on—"

"Based on the fact that I've seen this exact playbook executed seven times in the past two years," I interrupted, my voice remaining perfectly level. "And based on the fact that every single target company that didn't fight back was acquired within ninety days at massive discounts."

I walked back to the whiteboard and wrote one final number: 90.

"Days until the compliance investigation resolves in Apex's favor and your client's withdrawal looks like exactly what it is—market manipulation designed to artificially depress valuation ahead of an acquisition attempt."

The marker went back into the tray with a sharp click. I turned to face Marcus directly.

"Take this back to him," I said, tapping the whiteboard with my knuckle. "The numbers. The alternative funding sources. All of it."

Marcus gathered his papers with practiced efficiency, his movements sharp and controlled. He stood, straightened his jacket, and walked toward the door without another word.

The conference room emptied gradually after that—board members filing out in small clusters, voices low and urgent. I stayed at the whiteboard, erasing the numbers with slow, methodical strokes.

When the room was empty except for the two of us, Kade moved from his position by the wall to lean against the floor-to-ceiling windows. Biscayne Bay stretched out behind him, all blue water and distant sailboats.

"He knew you were joining us," Kade said. This time it wasn't the statement from the elevator—this felt like a question wrapped in certainty.

"Yes." I continued erasing, the white residue coming off in satisfying streaks. "He also knew he couldn't stop me. He just wanted to make my first day ugly."

Silence settled between us, filled only by the soft squeak of the eraser against the board and the distant hum of the building's climate control.

"Why did you prepare divorce papers six weeks ago?"

The question hit like a physical blow. My hand stopped moving, the eraser suspended halfway across the board. I turned to look at him.

His dark eyes held no curiosity, no sympathy—just a quiet certainty that he had the right to know this answer. Like he'd already earned access to the parts of my story I hadn't told anyone.

Before I could respond, my phone buzzed against the conference table where I'd set it down. The screen lit up with Ryker's name, his contact photo filling the display—a shot from our honeymoon in Santorini, both of us laughing at something I could no longer remember.

I stared at the screen for a long moment, then flipped the phone face-down on the polished wood surface. The same gesture I'd made last night in our bathroom, the same deliberate rejection of his attempts to control the narrative.

Kade saw it. His mouth shifted—not quite a smile, but the first crack in the controlled mask he'd worn all morning.

For the first time since I'd walked into this building, I felt like I might actually belong here.

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