
The Second She Stopped Waiting
Chapter 8
The terrace door burst open behind us, cutting off my question. The sound of heels against stone, sharp and deliberate.
I turned.
Aria stood in the doorway, her white dress luminous in the ambient light from the restaurant. Her expression was perfectly composed, but there was something in her eyes—a calculation that made my skin prickle with warning.
"I hope I'm not interrupting," she said, her voice carrying just enough sweetness to make the threat underneath it unmistakable.
For a moment, the three of us stood frozen in a tableau that felt charged with electricity. The Miami skyline glittered behind us, indifferent to the human drama unfolding on this terrace. I could feel Kade's presence beside me, steady and watchful, but Aria's gaze was fixed entirely on me.
Then her expression shifted. The practiced composure cracked, revealing something more complex underneath—not quite vulnerability, but a recognition that whatever game we'd all been playing had just changed rules.
"Sloane," she said, her voice losing its artificial sweetness. "We need to talk. Just the two of us."
I glanced at Kade. His dark eyes met mine for exactly three seconds, and in that brief exchange, I saw something that made my chest tighten with an emotion I couldn't name. His expression gave me the smallest hint—barely perceptible, meant only for me: your choice.
I turned back to Aria. "Fine."
Kade didn't leave. Instead, he moved to the terrace's edge, turning his back to us as if he were simply admiring the view of Biscayne Bay. But his shoulders remained tense, alert. The detail settled something in me that I hadn't even realized was wound tight. He was staying. Not intruding, not controlling, just present if I needed him.
Aria waited until she was certain Kade couldn't see her face before she spoke again. When she did, her directness caught me off guard.
"I'm not here to apologize," she said. "And I don't think you're a victim."
The words hit like a slap, but I kept my expression neutral. "Okay."
"You know Ryker isn't happy. You've known for months."
"I know I'm not happy," I replied, my voice steady. "That's not the same thing."
Aria's mouth curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. "He loves me."
"Maybe." I picked up my champagne flute from the terrace railing, the crystal cool against my palm. "But he loves that thirty-seven percent stake more than he loves anyone. Have you actually read your own contract? The profit distribution clauses? Do you understand what putting your name on that agreement means for you?"
For the first time since she'd stepped onto the terrace, Aria went silent. The question had hit its mark.
I continued, my voice gaining strength. "I'm not here to fight you for Ryker. He's your problem now. I'm here to tell you—don't sign anything else until you've had someone who isn't on his payroll review every line. Someone who works for you, not him."
Aria stared at me for a long moment, her perfectly applied makeup unable to hide the uncertainty that flickered across her features. The Miami night breeze lifted her hair, and for a second, she looked younger, more vulnerable than the polished woman who'd walked through that door.
"Why are you telling me this?" she asked finally.
"Because what he's doing to you is the same playbook he used on me. You just haven't reached that chapter yet."
I finished my champagne and set the empty glass back on the railing, preparing to leave. This conversation had served its purpose. I'd delivered my warning. What Aria did with it was her choice.
I was halfway to the door when her voice stopped me, barely above a whisper.
"He added a clause to your divorce agreement. If you take a job with any of his competitors within six months, your settlement gets reduced to zero."
My footsteps stopped. The world seemed to tilt on its axis.
Today was my first day at Apex Analytics. Ryker's most direct competitor.
The six-month clause.
I felt the blood drain from my face as the implications crashed over me like a wave. Every asset I'd fought for, every protection I'd thought I'd secured—all of it could disappear with a single phone call to his lawyers.
Slowly, I turned around and walked back to where Kade stood at the terrace's edge. I moved close enough that my shoulder brushed his arm, close enough that my voice would reach only him.
"I need you to tell me your company's real market value," I said, my words barely audible above the sound of water lapping against the marina below. "Right now."
He didn't ask why. He didn't hesitate. "Two point three billion. No debt."
A pause, weighted with the kind of understanding that came from recognizing a fellow strategist in action. "What are you thinking?"
I looked out over the glittering expanse of Miami's skyline, at all that glass and steel and ambition reaching toward the stars. Somewhere in one of those towers, Ryker was probably already on the phone with his legal team, preparing to activate that clause. Probably congratulating himself on his foresight.
He'd underestimated me before. But this time, he'd made a critical error.
He'd shown me exactly how much he had to lose.
"I'm thinking," I said, my voice steady despite the way my pulse had quickened, "if I can't win this war, I'm at least going to burn down everything he's afraid of losing."
The words hung in the air between us, carrying the weight of a decision that would change everything. Behind us, I could hear the muffled sounds of the party continuing, oblivious to the fact that the real game was being played out here on this terrace, under the stars.
Kade turned to look at me, his dark eyes reflecting the city lights. In that gaze, I saw recognition, understanding, and something else—something that looked almost like admiration.
The war wasn't over.
It was just beginning.
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