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When My Ex Claimed Me as His Wife in Public Novel Cover

When My Ex Claimed Me as His Wife in Public

The flowers were white dahlias and eucalyptus, and they smelled like something I couldn't name — clean and a little cold, the way late October in New York always feels right before it turns mean. The rooftop was strung with warm lights, and Central Park spread out below us like a painting someone had the nerve to make real. It was the kind of setting that made people believe in things. I was not in the business of believing in things anymore. But I could appreciate the view. 'You're tilting,' Haisley said from the corner of her mouth, not looking at me. She was radiant in ivory silk, her bouquet held with the white-knuckled grip of someone who had been planning this day for fourteen months and was not about to let a crooked maid of honor ruin the photos. 'I'm not tilting,' I said. 'Your left shoulder is lower than your right.' I adjusted. Mango, perched against that same left shoulder, made a sound of mild protest and grabbed a fistful of my hair.
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Chapter 3

Priya texted me at seven forty-three on a Tuesday.

Emergency. Babysitter canceled. Nanny has the flu. My mom is in Phoenix. I have the Meridian call at ten and the Langford deck due by noon. I am begging you.

I stared at the message for a moment. Then I looked at my calendar. Then I looked at the address at the top of my calendar.

Then I texted back: Fine. Bring her to the lobby by eight-thirty.

I told myself it was a practical decision. Mango was easy, mostly. She liked her crayons and her juice box and she had a particular fondness for sitting in laps and declaring ownership of things. She would be fine in my office for a few hours. I had a door that closed.

What I did not fully account for was that Mango had been to Hoffman Capital once before, briefly, in the lobby, and had apparently filed the experience under Places I Would Like to Explore More Thoroughly.

She walked in holding my hand, looked around the pale stone atrium with its vertical light and its very serious art, and said, with great satisfaction: 'Big.'

'Yes,' I said. 'Don't touch anything.'

She touched the wall immediately.

---

I set her up in my office with her crayons and a juice box and a stack of blank paper I pulled from the printer. She accepted these offerings with the gracious efficiency of someone who had places to be and was simply resting between engagements.

I had forty minutes of actual work before it happened.

I heard it first — a sound from down the corridor that was not the usual sound of Hoffman Capital's very quiet, very expensive hallway. A small, purposeful pattering. Then Dana's voice, slightly elevated, saying something that ended in 'please come back.'

I was already standing up.

I got to my doorway in time to see Mango, crayon still in hand, making excellent time toward the far end of the corridor. Toward the open door of Zane's office, where I could hear his voice — low, controlled, mid-sentence on what sounded like a conference call.

I moved fast. Not fast enough.

Mango walked through the door like she owned the building.

I reached the threshold two seconds behind her and stopped.

Zane was at his desk, phone to his ear, a document open in front of him. He looked up. His eyes went to Mango, who had already crossed the room with the focused intention of someone who had identified a destination and committed to it. She reached his chair, grabbed the armrest with both hands, and began the determined process of climbing into his lap.

He went very still.

On the phone, someone was still talking. He said, 'Hold on,' in a voice that was entirely level, and set the phone down on the desk without hanging up.

Mango settled herself, looked up at him with complete satisfaction, and held out the crayon.

'Color,' she said.

I leaned against the doorframe. I crossed my arms. I said nothing.

Zane looked at the crayon. He looked at Mango. He looked at me.

I smiled.

His jaw did something complicated. He picked up the phone. 'I'll call you back,' he said, and ended the call, and set the phone down with the careful precision of a man who was using an object to avoid looking at another person.

Mango, satisfied that the phone situation had been resolved in her favor, began arranging her crayons on his mahogany desk in a row. One rolled off the edge. She watched it go. She looked at Zane. She pointed at the floor.

'Down,' she said.

He looked at her for a long moment. Then, with the expression of a man doing something he cannot explain and has decided not to try, he bent and picked up the crayon and set it back on the desk.

Mango patted his hand. 'Good,' she said.

I pressed my lips together.

'She's very comfortable with you,' I said. 'Considering you're a stranger.'

'Children don't find me comfortable,' he said. It came out slightly strained.

'Apparently she didn't get the memo.' I tilted my head. 'You look tired, Zane. All this must be a lot at your age.'

His eyes cut to me. 'I'm thirty-four.'

'Mm,' I said pleasantly.

Mango held up a blue crayon and said, 'Blue,' with the gravity of a formal announcement.

'Blue,' Zane confirmed, in a tone I had never heard from him before. Something had gone out of the usual control of it. Something that was not quite softness but was adjacent to it in a way that made me feel strange.

I straightened up. 'I'll take her back.'

'She's fine,' he said.

I looked at him.

He looked at the crayons.

'She's fine,' he said again, quieter.

---

The board meeting was at two.

I had arranged for Dana to sit with Mango in the small conference room adjacent to the boardroom, with the crayons and a second juice box and a very firm instruction that the door was to remain closed. Dana had nodded with the expression of someone who had already identified the flaw in this plan and was choosing not to voice it.

The flaw revealed itself at two twenty-three.

I was mid-sentence — something about the Q3 projections and the revised modeling — when the glass door at the far end of the boardroom opened. Not quickly. Slowly, with the careful deliberateness of a very small person who had figured out the handle.

Six board members turned to look.

Mango stood in the doorway in her small yellow dress, crayon in hand, and surveyed the room with the calm authority of someone arriving fashionably late to their own event. Her eyes moved around the table. They found Zane at the head of it.

Her face lit up.

'Daddy!' she said, and started across the room.

The silence was total.

I picked up my water glass and took a slow sip.

Zane's expression was unreadable. Completely, perfectly unreadable — the kind of blank that takes real effort to hold. I had seen that face in boardrooms and in arguments and once, a long time ago, in a moment I did not let myself think about anymore. I knew what it cost him.

Mango reached his chair and grabbed his sleeve. He looked down at her. Something moved across his face that he shut down immediately.

The board member to his left — a man named Garrett who I had already identified as the most easily unsettled person in the room — cleared his throat.

I set down my glass.

'I apologize for the interruption,' I said, in my most professional voice. 'She belongs to a colleague. I'll have her removed.'

I stood, walked to Zane's end of the table, and crouched down to Mango's level. 'Come on, bug. Back to Dana.'

Mango looked at me. She looked at Zane. She appeared to weigh her options.

'No,' she said, and climbed into his lap.

Somewhere to my left, someone made a sound that was quickly suppressed.

I straightened up. I looked at Zane. He was looking at me with an expression that had about six things happening in it simultaneously, and the one I recognized most clearly was the one he was working hardest to hide.

He thought she was mine. He had thought so since the wedding. And every time Mango reached for him, every time she said that word, it was another turn of something he couldn't name and couldn't put down.

I let him sit with it for exactly three seconds.

Then I said, calmly, to the room: 'Shall we continue with the Q3 projections?'

And I walked back to my seat and did not look at him again.

But I felt it — the weight of his gaze following me down the length of the table, steady and unblinking and full of a question he didn't know how to ask.

I opened my folder.

The second small revenge, I decided, was even better than the first.

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