Se connecterBetrayed by the two people she trusted most—her husband and her best friend—she lost everything in a single devastating blow. Divorced, humiliated, and left with nothing but shattered dreams and burning ambition, she walks away determined to rebuild her life from the ground up. Four years later, she returns stronger than ever—powerful, successful, and the CEO of the most sought-after interior design company in the country. The woman everyone once underestimated is now completely out of reach. And suddenly, the man who signed those divorce papers so easily wants her back. Consumed by regret, he’s willing to do anything to win a second chance, proving that losing her was the biggest mistake of his life. But her heart is no longer his to claim so easily. There’s now another man in the picture—a dangerously attractive billionaire heir from Europe’s most powerful family. Cold, unreadable, and impossible to figure out, he offers her something her ex never did: a future untouched by betrayal. Caught between a remorseful ex determined to earn back her love and a mysterious billionaire who keeps pulling her closer while refusing to reveal his true feelings, she must make an impossible choice. Can a shattered heart learn to trust again… or will love betray her twice?
Voir plusKayla POV
The steak had gone cold two hours ago. The candles I lit with excitement now burned low and uneven, wax dripping down like tears onto the white tablecloth.
The wine sat untouched beside two crystal glasses, and the roses I spent thirty minutes arranging this morning were already beginning to wilt.
Just like my marriage.
I glance at the clock again. 10:37 p.m.
A bitter laugh escapes my lips as I tighten my grip around my phone. “Unbelievable.”
Tonight was supposed to matter. Not because of the expensive dinner or the decorations or the black silk dress I wore just because Adrian once told me it was his favorite.
Tonight mattered because it was our anniversary. Three years of marriage.
Three years of loving Adrian Ward — the powerful CEO everyone admired, the man magazines called brilliant, ruthless, unstoppable.
The man who hadn’t come home again.
I pace across the living room, heels clicking softly against the marble floor while thunder rumbles outside the penthouse windows. Rain streaks down the glass, blurring the city lights below.
There was still no call, no text and not even a simple Happy anniversary, Kayla.
My chest tightens painfully as I stare at the perfectly arranged dining table. I spent the entire day preparing this evening, hoping — stupidly hoping — that maybe tonight would feel like the old days again.
Before work became his entire world, and before I became invisible.
I swallow hard and glance toward the framed wedding photo hanging on the wall.
Adrian’s arm was wrapped around my waist, his smile warm and certain, like he couldn’t imagine a future without me in it.
Back then, he looked at me like I was everything and now, I’m not even enough for a phone call.
I sit on the couch and continue to glance at the photo frame on the wall. Adrian in his tuxedo, smiling like a man who had everything he wanted, and me in white lace, my veil floating in the breeze, eyes shining with love and hope.
I reach out to touch the frame, tracing the curve of his smile. “When did that smile stop being mine?”
A lump forms in my throat as I push myself up, walking toward the large window that overlooks the city.
The night skyline sparkles… tall buildings, moving cars, distant laughter. Everyone else seems to be living, loving, existing, and I’m here, waiting for a man who’s forgotten me.
I grab my phone again, scrolling through our chat. The last message from him this morning still stings:
Adrian: Don’t wait up. Might be late.
No heart. No emoji. Just… businesslike indifference.
My hand trembles slightly. I could call him. I should call him. But I already know how it’ll go. He’ll answer in that clipped, irritated tone and tell me he’s busy. He’ll remind me how demanding his work is.
And I’ll end up apologizing. Again.
I sigh and drop the phone onto the couch. The screen lights up with my reflection — tired eyes, smeared lipstick, curls falling apart. I don’t even recognize myself anymore.
Three years ago, I was full of life and dreams. I had quit my small interior design business to help him with his growing empire. He said we’d build our future together, that I’d never have to worry again.
And now, I feel like a ghost in my own marriage — present but unseen.
A soft rumble of thunder rolls in the distance, followed by light rain tapping on the window. The city fades behind misty glass. I hug my arms around myself, the silence pressing in harder than ever.
The doorbell suddenly rings.
My heart leaps. Finally! I rush toward the door, smoothing my hair and forcing a smile onto my lips.
“About time,” I whisper under my breath, trying to hide the tremor in my voice.
But when I swing the door open, my smile dies instantly.
It’s not Adrian.
It’s his driver — Mark. He stands awkwardly under the porch light, holding a small white box. His eyes flicker nervously, avoiding mine.
“Mrs. Ward,” he says quietly, “Mr. Ward asked me to deliver this to you.”
The rain behind him grows heavier, a low rhythm against the concrete. I stare at the box for a moment before taking it from his hand.
It’s wrapped neatly, too neatly, like something arranged by an assistant, not a husband.
“Where is he?” My voice comes out colder than I intended.
Mark hesitates. “He’s at the Grand Regency Hotel, ma’am. Business dinner.”
A bitter laugh escapes me before I can stop it. “At ten-thirty? On our anniversary?”
He doesn’t answer. He just nods slightly, mutters a polite “Goodnight,” and walks back toward the car.
I close the door slowly, my chest tightening. The box feels heavier now. I set it on the table and remove the ribbon with trembling fingers. Inside lies a gold necklace… delicate, elegant, beautiful… expensive.
But it feels empty. No card. No note.
It’s not a gift from a husband in love — it’s guilt money.
Tears prick my eyes as I sink to the floor, clutching the box. The necklace glints under the dim light, mocking me.
He didn’t forget.
He just didn’t care enough to show up.
The rain outside intensifies, wind howling through the cracks in the windows.
I sit there on the cold marble floor, staring at the dinner table across the room, the one I spent all day perfecting for a man who chose to be somewhere else.
A dull ache grows in my chest until it feels unbearable. I wipe my tears, stand up, and blow out the last candle still burning faintly on the table.
“Happy anniversary, Kayla,” I whisper bitterly.
I pour myself a glass of wine and down it in one gulp, the warmth doing nothing to ease the sting in my throat.
I glance once more at the necklace, at the empty chair across from me, and then toward the door he should have walked through hours ago.
Somewhere deep inside, something shifts. Quiet, almost unnoticeable, but real.
Maybe it’s the first crack in my blind loyalty.
Maybe it’s the beginning of an ending I didn’t see coming.
Either way, I know one thing for sure.
This night will stay with me.
Because when the heart breaks enough times, it stops waiting and mine just did.
Kayla’s POVFour years later.Sometimes, I wonder if the woman I used to be would even recognize me now.Back then, I was soft… always waiting, hoping, forgiving. Now, I’m steel beneath silk. Still kind, but never naive.The world broke me once. I rebuilt myself with the pieces.The morning sunlight poured through the tall glass windows of Brooks Atelier, my company… my empire. What had started as a small interior design studio in a rented office now occupied two floors of a high-rise building in downtown Manhattan.The faint hum of the city below always energized me. It reminded me of how far I’d come… from crying on cold floors to walking in heels worth more than my old rent.My phone buzzed on the desk. My assistant, Maya, peeked in through the glass door, holding a tablet.“Good morning, Ms. Brooks,” she said with her usual bright smile. “You have a 10 a.m. meeting with the investors from Halden Properties, and your 11:30 call with the new luxury hotel in Milan.”“Perfect,” I repl
Kayla’s POVI didn’t sleep that night.No matter how tightly I shut my eyes, the sound of Vivian’s body hitting the floor kept echoing in my head — over and over again.The house was silent now, but that silence wasn’t peace. It was a punishment.Adrian hadn’t come home after the incident. He had rushed Vivian to the hospital and left me standing there, accused, speechless, broken. The memory of his words cut sharper than anything else.“You disgust me, Kayla. You’ll get the divorce papers soon enough.”Every time I replayed it, my chest burned.I wanted to scream, to cry, to beg him to believe me… but what was the point? He’d already made up his mind.The morning came, cold and cruel. I stood by the window, watching the sunrise, numb to its warmth. The house felt emptier than ever. Every corner carried a memory I wished I could erase… laughter that once filled these walls, promises he’d made, love that used to mean something.I was in the kitchen when I heard the front door unlock.
Kayla’s POVThe sky was already dark when I got home.The rain hadn’t stopped since morning. It fell harder now, like the heavens themselves were mocking me. My clothes were soaked, my hair clinging to my face as I stumbled inside, shutting the door behind me.The house… our house… felt different. Empty. Hollow.Every piece of furniture I had picked out, every wall I had painted, now looked like a stranger’s home. My chest tightened painfully as I looked around. This place once held laughter, warmth, and promises. Now, it only holds memories that cut deeper than knives.I dropped my bag on the floor and stood there, staring into space. I should pack my things. I should call my mother. I should do something. But I couldn’t move. My body felt heavy, my heart heavier.I walked to the dining room, where last night’s candles still sat, their wax hardened, the food untouched. The necklace Adrian sent lay on the table, glinting under the dim light… a cruel reminder of how blind I’d been.I
Kayla’s POVThe sound of rain is the first thing I hear when I open my eyes.It’s morning, but the world outside looks gray. The curtains are drawn halfway, letting in a sliver of light that falls across the table, the plates from last night still untouched, the wine glass half empty, the necklace box lying open like a scar I can’t close.My head throbs from crying and wine. My throat feels dry, my chest heavy. I pull myself off the couch, my neck aching from sleeping there.The house smells faintly of perfume and regret.I move to the kitchen, pour a glass of water, and try to breathe, but every corner of this place reminds me of last night. The candles, the food, the silence — everything feels suffocating.I glance at the clock. It’s already past nine.Adrian still hasn’t come home.My heart stings at the thought. I grab my phone, hoping — foolishly — to see a message, a call, an apology. Nothing.Just emptiness.I stare at his contact name, ‘Adrian’ and for a moment, I almost dele


















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