
The Wife He Threw Away
Chapter 3
The morning rush at The Daily Grind had finally subsided, leaving me with a moment to breathe as I wiped down the counter. Three weeks of serving coffee had hardened my resolve—each humiliation fueling my late-night studies of business strategy and corporate finance.
"Excuse me, miss."
I looked up to find myself staring into the most penetrating gray eyes I'd ever seen. The man before me exuded quiet authority in his impeccably tailored charcoal suit. His dark hair was swept back from a face that belonged on a Renaissance painting—all sharp angles softened by an almost imperceptible smile.
"How can I help you?" I managed, suddenly conscious of my coffee-stained apron.
"Americano, black," he replied, his accent carrying the faintest European lilt. "And perhaps some assistance with your manager."
I followed his gaze to where an elderly woman was arguing heatedly with Marco, my insufferable supervisor. Her voice rose with distress as Marco dismissed her complaints with increasing rudeness.
"She claims we overcharged her card twice," the stranger explained. "Your colleague seems... less than accommodating."
Without thinking, I abandoned his order and moved toward the confrontation. The woman clutched her receipt, hands trembling slightly.
"I'm on a fixed income," she was saying. "I can't afford to be charged twice!"
"Look, lady, our system doesn't make mistakes," Marco snapped. "Maybe you should check your math."
"I'll handle this, Marco," I interjected, gently taking the receipt from the woman's hand. A quick glance confirmed she was right—the system had double-charged her card for a simple tea.
"I'm so sorry about this, ma'am. You're absolutely correct." I opened the register, processed the refund, and added a complimentary pastry voucher. "The mistake was ours."
The relief in her eyes was worth Marco's glare. As she thanked me and left, I felt the stranger's gaze following me back to the counter.
"Your Americano," I said, sliding it across to him.
He accepted it with a nod. "Impressive conflict resolution. Most would have defaulted to company policy rather than basic decency."
"Most haven't been on the receiving end of corporate indifference," I replied before I could stop myself.
Something flickered in his eyes—interest, perhaps. "Indeed." He placed a crisp bill in the tip jar and slid a business card across the counter. "Alexander Sterling, Sterling Consultancy Group. We value people who understand both business and humanity."
With a subtle nod that felt strangely significant, he departed, leaving me clutching his card like a lifeline.
That night, I crafted and deleted a dozen emails before finally sending a simple, professional inquiry about potential positions. By morning, I had an interview scheduled.
---
The Sterling Consultancy Group occupied the top floor of a sleek Midtown building—a world away from my dingy apartment and coffee-scented uniform. I smoothed down my only decent blouse, purchased from a consignment shop, and tried to project confidence I didn't feel.
Alexander greeted me with cool professionalism, as if our coffee shop encounter had never happened. "Ms. Hayes, thank you for coming. We'll begin with a case study exercise."
Three senior partners joined us in the conference room, their skepticism palpable as they reviewed my sparse résumé. The case they presented involved restructuring a failing luxury retail chain—exactly the kind of business problem I'd been studying obsessively.
Drawing on my newfound knowledge and years of observing the elite while married to James, I outlined a comprehensive strategy. The room's energy shifted as I spoke, skepticism giving way to surprise, then genuine interest.
"Impressive analysis," said one partner, a woman whose sharp eyes had initially dismissed me.
Alexander's expression remained unreadable, but he offered me a junior analyst position on the spot.
---
Two weeks into my new role, I was reviewing internal files when I stumbled upon something startling—detailed acquisition strategies targeting Wilson Group subsidiaries. Page after page of meticulous plans to dismantle my ex-husband's family empire.
"Finding your work engaging?"
I jumped at Alexander's voice behind me. He stood in the doorway, his expression unreadable.
"You're targeting the Wilson Group," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
He closed the door and sat across from me. "Does that trouble you?"
"I... I'm just surprised."
"Are you?" His gaze was penetrating. "Or did you suspect there was more to my interest in hiring James Wilson's discarded wife?"
My stomach dropped. "You knew who I was all along."
"Emilia Hayes, formerly Wilson." Alexander leaned forward, his voice dropping to a confidential tone. "What I'm about to tell you doesn't leave this room."
He unbuttoned his suit jacket, suddenly looking less like a polished executive and more like a man unburdening himself of a heavy secret.
"The Sterling family isn't just another financial dynasty. Three decades ago, the Wilsons orchestrated our near destruction through corporate sabotage and fraud. My father never recovered from the public humiliation. He died believing our name would never be restored."
His eyes met mine, burning with quiet intensity. "I've spent my life preparing to dismantle what the Wilsons built on our ruins. And now, Emilia, I find myself with an unexpected ally—someone who understands their vulnerabilities from the inside."
I stared at him, realizing I stood at a crossroads. Behind me lay the shattered remains of my old life. Before me, Alexander offered something darkly tempting—not just a job, but revenge.
"So," he said softly, "are you in?"
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