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His First Love Was My Last Straw
His First Love Was My Last Straw

His First Love Was My Last Straw

9.1
/ 10
My son made his birthday wish in front of twenty people. "I wish the pretty lady was my real mommy instead." He was looking right at me when he said it. Five years old. My own flesh and blood. And the "pretty lady" he's talking about? My husband's dying ex-girlfriend — the one currently wearing my mother's necklace and living in the guest suite of my house. I didn't cry. I stopped crying the night Kade gave away our wedding — the one I'd spent six months planning, down to the custom Vera Wang — to let her experience walking down the aisle. Because she's terminally ill. Because she "only has months left." Because I'm supposed to be the bigger person. I've been the bigger person for five years. Bigger than the woman sleeping in my home. Bigger than the whispered phone calls at 2 AM. Bigger than watching my husband look at someone else the way he's never once looked at me. But here's what Kade Ashford doesn't know. I'm not breaking down tonight. I'm breaking free. The divorce papers are already signed — my side, anyway. And the offshore accounts his family thinks are hidden? I've had the routing numbers for three months. I slide the papers across the table. His face doesn't even change. He's already checking his phone — she's been rushed to the ER again. He leaves without signing. What he doesn't expect is who's waiting for me outside. Ryker Callahan. Six-three. Jaw like it was carved from Carrara marble. The kind of man who walks into a room and every woman forgets her own name. The founder of the venture fund that just acquired a controlling stake in the Ashford family's empire. And apparently, he's been watching me for a while. "You look like a woman who's about to do something magnificent." His voice is low and unhurried — the voice of a man who's never had to rush for anything because everything eventually comes to him. And the way his eyes drag down my face, slow and deliberate, makes my pulse do something it hasn't done in five years. I'm still legally married to a man who doesn't want me. And the most dangerous man in Austin is looking at me like I'm the only interesting thing in this city. This is either my revenge — or my ruin.

Chapter 1 of His First Love Was My Last Straw

The grandfather clock in the foyer chimed one in the morning, the sound echoing hollowly through the cavernous, empty space. I sat paralyzed at the head of the massive mahogany dining table in our Westlake Hills mansion, my eyes locked on the pathetic spread before me. The elaborate roasted chicken I’d spent hours preparing was now congealed beneath a sickly thin layer of white fat, while the garlic mashed potatoes had grown completely cold and stiff. At the center of it all sat a decadent buttercream birthday cake—unlit, the expensive candles still untouched in their box beside it. The silence in the room wasn't just quiet; it was suffocating.

My phone screen glowed harshly in the darkness. I knew I shouldn't have opened Threads, but some dark, masochistic part of me needed to see it. I needed absolute, agonizing confirmation of what my gut already knew.

Celine's post stared back at me, dripping with manufactured sweetness: *"Thank you, Mr. K and little Theo, for my gifts! Theo made this cup with his own hands! Feeling so blessed despite the battle."* The accompanying photo showed her beaming radiantly, a breathtaking South Sea pearl necklace draped elegantly around her slender, flawless neck. Beside her collarbone sat a lopsided ceramic mug bearing a child's messy handwriting: *"Happy Birthday, Sister."*

Today is my birthday. Today is also my fifth wedding anniversary.

My thumb trembled as I zoomed in on the pearls. Each individual gem caught the light differently—iridescent, glowing, almost alive. I knew the weight and luster of those pearls better than I knew my own reflection in the mirror. My mother had worn them every single day until the afternoon she died. They were the only tangible thing she'd left me, the absolute last piece of her legacy I could hold onto when the grief became too much.

I had lost them the day I nearly bled to death giving birth to Theo. The chaos of the hospital, the screaming monitors, the emergency C-section, the hemorrhage that wouldn't stop—somewhere in all that blinding terror, the necklace had vanished from my belongings. Kade had held my hand as I recovered, promising me he'd find it. He'd sworn to me, looking directly into my eyes, that he'd tear the entire hospital apart brick by brick if he had to.

And he did find it. Then he wrapped it up and gave it to his mistress.

Bile rose in my throat. I closed the app and slammed my phone face-down on the mahogany wood. The cold, untouched dinner I'd lovingly prepared for three stared back at me, a pathetic monument to my own eighteen-month delusion. I remembered the desperate, pleading text I had sent to Kade this afternoon: *"Please come home early tonight."*

His reply had been a single, dismissive character: *"Mm."* Then, absolutely nothing. No follow-up text. No emergency explanation. Just eleven hours of agonizing silence.

The heavy front door clicked open.

My heart seized in my chest. From the shadows of the dining room, I watched Kade walk into the foyer. Our five-year-old son, Theo, was draped heavily over his broad shoulder, his small face slack with deep sleep. Kade turned, saw me sitting rigidly in the dark, and stopped dead mid-stride. His dark eyebrows drew together in a sharp V—the universal expression of an arrogant man caught wildly off guard, calculating exactly what trivial detail he'd forgotten.

"Why aren't you asleep?" he asked, his tone laced with mild irritation rather than guilt.

The sound of his voice caused Theo to stir. The little boy's eyes fluttered open, and he slid clumsily down from his father's arms. He padded across the hardwood toward me, yawning widely, and stopped at my chair. His small, warm hand patted my rigid shoulder with rehearsed, almost robotic tenderness.

"Happy birthday, Mommy." He smiled—a sweet, cherubic smile that made my chest physically ache with love and grief. "But we're a family, and we have so much time together. Pretty Sister only has a few months left to live. You wouldn't be mad over something this small, right?"

I stared at my son in absolute horror. Five years old.

Five-year-olds do not talk like hospice nurses. They don't rationalize emotional neglect.

"Go to bed, Theo," I said softly, forcing my voice not to break. "I'll come say goodnight in a minute." He yawned again, completely oblivious to the war zone he was standing in, and trudged up the grand staircase, his footsteps fading into the plush carpet of the hallway.

Kade remained by the door, his posture defensive and rigid.

I breathed in the stale air, held it in my burning lungs, and let it out slow. "Let's get a divorce."

His handsome face didn't fall. It didn't crumble with regret or contort with sudden rage. There was just a minuscule ripple—brief and ruthlessly controlled—before smoothing back into that familiar, infuriating mask of corporate indifference.

"I didn't forget your birthday, Sienna," he said dismissively. "Your gift has been sitting in my office ready for weeks."

I laughed. The sound that ripped out of my throat was fundamentally wrong—hollow, brittle, and bordering on unhinged. "My mother's pearl necklace is already sitting on Celine's neck. I saw the post, Kade."

"I only lent it to her." His voice was steady. Matter-of-fact. Like he was discussing a slight dip in the stock market. Like giving away a dead woman's final, sacred gift to her grieving daughter was a simple administrative oversight.

"For her birthday," I pushed back, my voice trembling violently despite my best efforts to steady it. "Which is apparently far more important than your wife's. Much more important than your own wedding anniversary."

"Celine is unwell. You know that. She's terminal."

I didn't argue. I just reached beneath my chair and pulled out the thick manila envelope I'd finalized hours ago. The legal papers inside were crisp and professional—my signature already drying in stark black ink at the bottom of each page. I slapped them onto the mahogany and slid them across the table until they hit his side.

"Sign them."

Kade's sharp jaw tightened dangerously. His lips pressed into a thin, pale line of absolute fury. "What about Theo?"

"He stays with the Ashfords."

The words tasted like battery acid on my tongue. But I said them. I meant them.

"You'd abandon your own son?" Kade hissed, taking a threatening step forward.

"I'm leaving him exactly where he's been his whole life—with his father. With his dying 'pretty sister' and whatever twisted psychological fairy tales you've been feeding him to justify your affair."

Before Kade could erupt, his phone screamed into the heavy silence. He answered on the second ring.

I watched his face transform instantly—the annoyance at being confronted by his wife melting into sharp, terrified focus as the voice on the other end spiraled into hysterics. "Kade! Something's wrong—Celine collapsed, she's not breathing properly—"

He didn't hang up. He didn't say a single word of goodbye to the woman he'd been married to for five years. He simply grabbed his keys from the crystal bowl by the door and disappeared into the night, the heavy front door slamming behind him with the finality of a gunshot.

Alone again.

The force of the door had sent the divorce papers scattering across the marble floor in his haste. I stood on violently trembling legs and walked slowly around the massive table. Kneeling on the freezing marble, I gathered the pages one by one, methodically smoothing out the deep wrinkles my husband's expensive leather shoes had left behind on the paper. My signature glared up at me, dark, resolute, and final.

The space beside it—where Kade Ashford's name should have been—remained stubbornly empty. I pressed my palm flat against the unwritten line, drawing strength from the cold paper.

*Tomorrow,* I thought, a new, icy resolve crystallizing in my veins. *Tomorrow, everything burns.* But for now, I sat alone in the dark, listening to the deafening silence of a sprawling mansion that had never truly been my home, holding a stack of divorce papers that weighed absolutely nothing and everything all at once.

---

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