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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 6

The Miami night air carried salt and jasmine as I stood outside COTE Miami at 7:58 PM, the deep burgundy Jacquemus dress I'd hastily purchased from the Design District clinging to my frame like armor. The valet attendants moved in practiced choreography, accepting keys to Ferraris and Bentleys with the casual efficiency of men who'd seen it all.

I hadn't planned to come. The divorce papers were signed, notarized, filed. This anniversary dinner should have been Ryker's problem, not mine.

Then my lawyer had called twenty minutes ago with a single word that changed everything: "premeditated."

I took a deep breath—not to calm myself, but to slip into the mindset I'd perfected during high-stakes negotiations at Deloitte. Cold. Precise. Never show your cards first.

The restaurant's glass doors reflected my silhouette as I approached. Inside, warm light spilled across faces I recognized—Miami's business elite, the same crowd that had toasted our engagement, our wedding, every carefully orchestrated social event Ryker used to expand his empire.

I pushed open the door.

The conversations didn't stop immediately. It took a few seconds for the recognition to ripple through the room like stones dropped in still water. Forty pairs of eyes gradually found me, expressions shifting from polite interest to barely concealed curiosity.

Ryker stood near the bar, a champagne flute halfway to his lips. The moment he saw me, his entire body went rigid—not surprise, but the kind of frozen tension that comes from seeing your worst-case scenario walk through the door.

The woman beside him turned.

Aria.

She was younger than I'd expected, prettier in that effortless way that came from good genes and expensive skincare. Her white backless dress probably cost more than most people's rent, and on her wrist—

My breath caught.

The Audemars Piguet Royal Oak I'd given Ryker for our first anniversary. The one he'd claimed was stolen from his car six months ago. The one I'd helped him file an insurance claim for.

The silence stretched for exactly two seconds. Then I moved.

I walked directly to Ryker, my heels clicking against the polished concrete floor with measured precision. The crowd parted slightly, creating a clear path between us. When I reached him, I rose on my toes and kissed his cheek—the perfect gesture of an unsuspecting wife arriving fashionably late to her own anniversary celebration.

His cologne was different. Something darker, more expensive. Something Aria had probably chosen.

"Happy anniversary, darling," I said, loud enough for the nearest tables to hear. Then I leaned closer, my lips brushing his ear, my voice dropping to a whisper that could have been mistaken for intimate endearment.

"The asset restructuring agreement. My lawyers found some interesting discrepancies this afternoon. You might want to think about how you're going to explain Aria's thirty-seven percent stake before you come home tonight."

I pulled back, my smile never wavering, and watched the color drain from his face.

Not pale—that would have been too simple. This was the specific shade of panic that came from realizing someone had found the bodies you'd buried.

Aria moved closer to him, her manicured fingers brushing his arm in what should have been a gesture of support. Instead, Ryker stepped back—just half a step, but enough for at least three people in our immediate vicinity to notice.

Including Margaret from the Miami Business Journal, who was standing near the raw bar with her phone discreetly positioned at table height.

Perfect.

I picked up a champagne flute from a passing waiter's tray, the crystal cool against my palm. "I should mingle," I said, my voice carrying just far enough. "So many friends to catch up with."

I turned away from Ryker's frozen expression and began moving through the crowd. Conversations resumed around me, but I could feel the undercurrent of speculation, the way people's eyes tracked my movement while they pretended to discuss quarterly earnings and vacation plans.

I was halfway across the room when I felt it—a hand on my wrist. Not grabbing, not demanding. Asking.

The touch was completely different from Ryker's possessive grip. Steadier. Lighter. Like the person attached to it understood the difference between guiding and controlling.

I turned.

Kade stood at the edge of the crowd, nearly invisible in a perfectly tailored black Zegna suit that made him look like he'd materialized from the shadows themselves. His dark eyes held mine with that same unsettling intensity I'd seen in the conference room, but now there was something else—a watchfulness that felt protective rather than predatory.

"You shouldn't be here," I said, though something in my chest loosened at the sight of him.

"Neither should you." His thumb brushed across my pulse point—once, barely perceptible. "Not alone."

"How did you know I'd come?"

"Because this is his game." Kade's voice was low, meant only for me despite the crowd around us. "And walking into it alone isn't safe."

I stared at him for three seconds, feeling something shift in my throat—a tightness I hadn't even realized was there beginning to ease. It was a sensation I hadn't experienced in three years of marriage: being seen as someone who mattered enough to protect.

Not as an asset. Not as a trophy. As a person worth keeping safe.

The champagne bubbled against my lips as I took a sip, buying myself time to process this moment. Around us, the party continued its careful choreography of power and influence, but I felt suddenly separate from it all—like Kade and I existed in a pocket of stillness while the world moved around us.

"What happens now?" I asked.

Kade's mouth didn't smile, but something in his expression shifted. "Now we watch him try to explain why his wife just crashed his coming-out party."

Across the room, I could see Ryker in animated conversation with two men I recognized as board members from his fund. His gestures were too sharp, too quick. Aria had disappeared—probably to the bathroom to regroup, or maybe to the parking garage to wait this out.

Margaret was still filming.

"He doesn't know about the divorce papers yet," I said.

"No. But he's about to."

The certainty in Kade's voice sent a chill down my spine. I looked up at him, searching his face for clues about what he knew that I didn't.

Before I could ask, my phone buzzed against my clutch. A text from an unknown number: "Check your email. Now."

I glanced at Kade. He nodded once, barely perceptible.

With trembling fingers, I opened my email app. The most recent message had no subject line, just an attachment: a PDF labeled "Meridian Capital - Internal Communications - CONFIDENTIAL."

I opened it.

The first page was an email thread between Ryker and someone named David Kim, dated two weeks ago. The subject line read: "Sloane Whitfield - Apex Analytics Position - Termination Strategy."

My vision tunneled as I read the first few lines:

"David - Need you to activate the compliance audit on Apex immediately. Sloane starts Monday and we can't let her establish any foothold there. Full financial pressure until they're forced to let her go. Timing is critical..."

The phone nearly slipped from my hands.

This wasn't just about the divorce. This wasn't just about Aria.

Ryker had tried to destroy my career before it could even begin.

I looked up at Kade, who was watching my face with that patient intensity. "You knew," I said.

"I suspected. Now we have proof."

Across the room, Ryker was looking directly at us, his conversation with the board members forgotten. Even from this distance, I could see the moment he realized something had shifted.

The game had changed again.

And this time, I wasn't playing defense.

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