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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 5

The phone buzzed against the polished conference table for the fourth time, Ryker's contact photo filling the screen with that damned Santorini honeymoon shot. I watched it ring until it automatically rolled to voicemail, the screen going dark with a soft click.

Then it lit up again.

Not another call this time—a calendar notification. My breath caught as I read the text: "Three Year Anniversary Dinner - Tonight 8PM - COTE Miami. Sloane's attendance required."

Required.

I stared at the invitation for exactly three seconds, my thumb hovering over the notification. This wasn't private. The guest list would include at least forty people—Miami's business elite, the same crowd that had attended our engagement party, our wedding, every carefully orchestrated social event Ryker used to build his empire.

He wanted to parade our perfect marriage in front of them. Tonight. While the divorce papers he'd signed at two AM were still warm.

He didn't know I was at Apex. Didn't know I'd just saved a forty-seven million dollar crisis. Didn't know that his little financial warfare game had backfired spectacularly.

I slipped the phone into my bag and looked up at Kade, who was still leaning against the windows, his dark eyes studying my face with that unsettling intensity.

"I need to borrow your legal team," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "There's a document that needs notarization this afternoon."

Something shifted in his expression—not surprise, but recognition. Like he'd been waiting for this moment.

"Conference room C has been reserved for you since nine this morning," he said.

Of course it had.

---

At three o'clock, I sat alone in the legal department's conference room, fluorescent lights humming overhead. The notary had left twenty minutes ago, along with the legal director and his assistant. The room felt hollow now, filled only with the distant sounds of afternoon traffic and the whisper of climate control.

In my hands, I held the original divorce agreement—Ryker's signature dark and slightly jagged across the bottom of page twelve. He'd signed it at 2:17 AM, according to the timestamp the courier had provided. The handwriting was looser than usual, rushed. Maybe he'd been drinking. Maybe he'd just wanted it over with.

I stared at that signature, waiting for something—tears, relief, regret. None of it came. Instead, there was something else, something cold and clean, like a window being opened in a stuffy room. Fresh air, even if it carried a chill.

Footsteps in the hallway. I didn't look up until I heard the soft knock on the doorframe.

Kade stood there with two cups from Erewhon, the green logo visible on the sleek white containers. He stepped into the room and set one in front of me.

"Matcha latte," he said. "You didn't eat breakfast this morning."

I looked up at him, genuinely surprised. "How do you know that?"

"The way you held your coffee. Like it was the only thing keeping you upright."

I accepted the cup without saying thank you. The ceramic was warm against my palms, grounding me in this moment, this room, this new reality where someone noticed details about me that my husband of three years had never seen.

The silence stretched between us, comfortable in a way that should have felt strange but didn't. Finally, I spoke.

"I started preparing six weeks ago because I saw Aria's name in his calendar. Seventeen times."

Kade settled into the chair across from me—not beside me, but directly opposite, his dark eyes never leaving my face.

"Do you know who Aria is?" he asked.

I took a sip of the matcha, tasting earth and sweetness. "His college girlfriend. First love, all that."

"No."

The word hit like a physical blow. Kade pulled out his phone, swiped to a document, and placed it on the table between us. The screen showed a corporate filing, dense with legal language and financial figures.

"Aria is a partner at Voss Capital's new subsidiary. Her actual stake is twice what Ryker holds on paper."

I stared at the document, my vision tunneling as the numbers began to make sense. Asset transfers. Shell companies. Dates that corresponded exactly with our joint account activities over the past six months.

The floor seemed to shift beneath my chair.

This wasn't just infidelity. This was systematic financial manipulation—and I, as his legal spouse, might have just unknowingly signed away any claim to assets that were rightfully half mine.

The matcha turned bitter in my mouth. I set the cup down with trembling fingers and looked up at Kade. His expression held no pity, no sympathy—just a patient waiting, like he'd known this moment would come and had been preparing for it.

"I need your legal team to review every line of that agreement tonight," I said, my voice cutting through the sudden silence like broken glass.

Kade's mouth didn't smile, but something in his eyes shifted. "They're already standing by."

Of course they were.

Outside the conference room windows, Miami's skyline glittered in the afternoon sun, all glass and steel and endless possibility. Somewhere across the city, Ryker was probably choosing wine for tonight's anniversary dinner, selecting the perfect vintage to complement whatever performance he had planned.

He had no idea what was coming.

Neither did I, but for the first time in months, that felt like an advantage rather than a weakness.

I picked up the divorce agreement and walked toward the door, each step carrying me further from the woman who had signed those papers in ignorance and closer to whoever I was about to become.

The game had changed.

It was my move now.

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