appliances, a refrigerator that could probably order its own groceries. But it
d, pulling open empty drawer after e
ing for nearby grocery stores. The hotel concierge had mentioned a high-end organic
ious. "There's a 92% probability Olivia will get i
rmal. She had to be normal. Doctors bought groceries. Mothers fed their children. She was both,
ferent. Because somewhere in this city-perhaps in
ught down and head
aisles with practiced efficiency, filling her cart with vegetables, grass-fed beef, and the specific brand of pasta Olivia had declared
he hea
, dripping with a sweetness
tt Bea
rawberries. She didn't turn. She didn't need to.
carrying across the dairy aisle. "Though honestly, after the summer we s
se. Low. Familiar in a way that
one would notice anything
she had five years ago-impeccably dressed, blonde hair perfectly styled, a smile that had charmed New York society w
a wedge of aged Gruyère with mil
nder her grip, her knuckles turning white. The memory of that night on the yacht-Scarlett's satisfied smil
ed lungs. Not yet. It wasn't time. Revenge was a surgery, not a street
an unlucky one, but New York's elite all shopped at the same handful of establishments. It was why she
expected to ga
hand. No ring. Five years, and she still hadn't managed to becom
display, and for one terrifying sec
unched from M
lity of him-taller than she remembered, his shoulders broader, an air of cold authority radiating from him like a winter chill-was a shock to
knocked against a display of artisanal pasta sauces. A jar of organic tom
, coming to a stop directly besid
then stepped around it without a second look in her directi
ling. She remembered making him pasta from scratch, the scent of garlic and basil
n walked quickly to the checkout, her purchases a
scending pity, "will do anything to get Mr. Astor'
social climber, another woman angling for Julian's attention. M
ve glance, but for a split second, his eyes narrowed. Something in the line of her jaw, the intensity in her eyes as she met his gaze, s
adn't realized she'd b
o The Astor Grand in a daze. The encounter had been a warning. She was in their t
lounge with the children while housekeeping finished preparing the room-and headed for the elevator. As she stepped out on the penthouse floor,
known he frequented the hotel-it was an Astor property, after all-but this
suffocating. He was so close she could smell the faint, clean scent of his cologne, a scent that once meant home. His gaze lingered on her for a
entered suite 48A and locked the door behind her, leaning ag
hotel's most exclusive suites for families or security details who needed to occupy adjoining rooms. It was supposed to be locked from bo
nife on the cutting board was a comfort. Caleb was engrossed in his tablet, his brow furrowed in concentration
usiness call in the other room. He was supposed to be resting. The doctors always said he needed to rest. But he was bored, and
th the concierge about the suite's security arrangements. Just a peek. That was all. But th
his bed and padded across the thick carpet to the connecting door. He w
the enormous king-sized bed on the oth
kitchen, her eyes wide with excite
see! I found
, curled up on the vast, king-sized bed, fast asleep, was a small boy in a perfec
the mirror im
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