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t hostage, forcing me back into a gilded cage where I endured his cold contempt and his very public affair. I p
He abandoned me in a torrential do
other's locket pulled from auction, the very reason fo
nto the hands of his business rival,
surv
re me, tears streaming down his face, holding th
ack what
y voice calm and final. "And
pte
a
ne, a multi-million-dollar bailout, but his condition was a steel trap: I had to remarry him. I refused, my pride a tattered flag flying in the wreckage of my life. He simply smiled, a predator's grin, then acquired my late mother' s antique Cartier locket at a Sotheby' s auction. He held
rased everything. We lost the Fifth Avenue penthouse, the Hamptons estate, even the art collection. I
my family lawyer, a cold, formal email. The amount was staggering, enough to stabilize my father's remaining
ad already broken me once. Going back to him meant admitting defeat, surrendering my last shred of dignity.
"Never let anyone control your worth. Your strength com
yped a fierce refusal, rejecting his offe
oice hesitant. "This is a substantia
haking but firm. "I will not se
r's most cherished possession, the one item that held every memory of her, was going up for auction at Sotheby's. My family had sol
ater, a text message from an unknown number arrived. It was a photo of the locket, resting on a velvet cushion. T
old his assistant I would accept his terms. The humiliation burned through me, b
nthouse, the same one where we had lived before, where our first marriage had ended. I walked through the familiar rooms, each step a step de
is late nights or the lingering scent of unfamiliar perfume. I never showed jealousy. My face remained a blank
pulled up to the penthouse. I greeted
a?" he asked, his voic
it me. Not Jaxon's cologne, but something floral, distinctly feminine. On the passenger
onsole. The scent was stronger now. My stomach clenched, bu
I returned upstairs, Jaxon was in the
tated calmly. My voice was even, betraying nothing.
rned, his eyes narrowing. He expected a scene, a
offered, my voice still flat. "It mig
haps confusion, crossed his face. He wanted me to scream, to rage. My u
Dexter Morrison, his sycophantic best friend, sat across from me. The con
girls, don't you?" Dexter guffawed, nudging J
Cote last night. She's quite something. Much livelier than... well.
hewing slowly. The food was tastele
ena, said, attempting a half-hearted de
a whisper, quickly dro
forward, his eyes glinting with malicious amusement. "You married Jaxon for his mo
er. Every neuron in my brain screamed for me to lash out, to defend my
h a carefully constructed void. My lip
I said, my voice low and steady. "It doesn't pay
listening silently, slammed his glass on th
ded, his voice tight with frustration. "W
e old Ava, the one who would have torn Dexter limb from limb for such an insult. The Av
, exhausted, and more broken. My defiance only fueled his cruelty, made him push harder. My resistance had cost me everything, including the family fortune, thanks to his
tarted, a soft, ambient melody. The voices around me faded, replaced by a gentle hum. I closed
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