
The Wife He Threw Away
Chapter 2
The hiss of the espresso machine couldn't drown out the whispers. Three weeks had passed since my world imploded, and I'd fallen from grace with dizzying speed.
"Can I get a large caramel macchiato, extra shot?" The customer barely looked at me, sliding her credit card across the counter of The Daily Grind.
I nodded, forcing a smile as I took her card. "Name for the order?"
"Tiffany."
My fingers froze on the cup. I glanced up to see Tiffany Harrington's perfectly made-up face, her expression shifting from boredom to malicious delight as recognition dawned.
"Emilia Wilson! Or is it Hayes again now?" Her voice rose deliberately, ensuring nearby customers could hear. "My God, the rumors were true. You really are working as a... barista."
She said the word like it was a contagious disease. Heat crept up my neck as I wrote her name on the cup with trembling hands.
"It's just Emilia now," I managed, keeping my voice steady. "Your macchiato will be ready at the end."
Tiffany leaned closer, her diamond tennis bracelet glinting under the coffee shop lights. "You know, everyone's talking about how James threw you out without a penny. Victoria always said you weren't Wilson material."
I turned away, focusing on making her drink. The manager had only hired me out of pity after recognizing me from the tabloids. *WILSON HEIR DUMPS BARREN WIFE FOR PREGNANT MISTRESS* had been splashed across every gossip site for weeks.
"Such a shame about your... condition." Tiffany's voice dripped with false sympathy. "Though I suppose it's a blessing in disguise. Imagine being tied to James forever through a child?"
I placed her drink on the counter with more force than necessary, coffee sloshing over the rim. "Enjoy your macchiato, Tiffany."
She smirked, dropping a single dollar into the tip jar. "Keep the change, darling. Looks like you need it."
As she sashayed away, I caught the other baristas exchanging glances. They'd been cool toward me from day one—the fallen socialite was good for gossip but not friendship.
"Order up for the newbie," called Marco, the shift supervisor who made no secret of his disdain for me. "Table five needs service."
I grabbed the tray of pastries and coffee, making my way through the crowded café. That's when the door chimed, and a hush fell over the room.
Katherine Vance stood in the entrance, a vision in a cream designer maternity dress that probably cost more than six months of my rent. Her blonde hair cascaded in perfect waves, and her left hand—prominently displaying an enormous diamond ring—rested protectively over her slightly rounded belly.
Our eyes met across the room. Her lips curved into a predatory smile.
"Emilia! What a delightful surprise," she called out, gliding toward me like a shark scenting blood. "I was just telling James how concerned I was about your... situation."
I clutched the tray tighter, acutely aware of every eye in the café watching us. "I'm working, Katherine."
"So I see." She looked me up and down, taking in my coffee-stained apron and sensible shoes. "It's so... quaint. Almost inspiring how you've adapted to poverty."
She gestured to her stomach. "The baby's doing wonderfully, by the way. James is absolutely over the moon. We're thinking of naming him James Wilson Jr.—continuing the legacy and all that."
The tray trembled in my hands. Katherine casually reached out and selected a latte from it.
"Oh dear, this isn't what I ordered," she said with exaggerated disappointment, then "accidentally" tipped the cup. Hot coffee splashed across my apron and pants, burning through the fabric.
I gasped in pain as laughter rippled through the café.
"So clumsy of me," Katherine purred, not bothering to help as I frantically dabbed at the spreading stain. "Just like you were clumsy with your marriage. Do send me your dry cleaning bill—oh wait, can you even afford dry cleaning now?"
With that parting shot, she swept out, leaving me humiliated and scalded in her wake.
Hours later, I sat on the threadbare carpet of my tiny studio apartment, surrounded by the few possessions I'd managed to salvage. Tears streamed down my face as I hugged my knees to my chest, the day's humiliations washing over me in waves.
I'd lost everything—my home, my status, my financial security. The prenup James had insisted upon left me with virtually nothing after our short marriage. Three years as Mrs. Wilson, and I had been discarded like yesterday's trash.
Something hard and determined crystallized in my chest as I wiped away my tears. Enough. I was done being a victim.
With shaking hands, I opened my laptop—one of the few valuable items I still owned—and began searching. Business courses. Finance fundamentals. Corporate strategy. I ordered textbooks with the last of my credit card limit and enrolled in every free online course I could find.
By dawn, my eyes were red-rimmed but clear. The woman who had been broken was gone. In her place stood someone new—someone who would never again be at anyone's mercy.
"Watch me rise," I whispered to the empty room, a promise to myself that felt like the first truth I'd spoken in years.
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