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My Husband Gave Our Penthouse Key to His Ex
My Husband Gave Our Penthouse Key to His Ex

My Husband Gave Our Penthouse Key to His Ex

8.1
/ 10
Wren Calloway didn't marry Sterling Crane for love. She married him for a deal — one that would secure the most critical merger in her family's real estate empire. All she needed was twelve months of a clean, uncomplicated marriage. Three days in, Sterling hands his "fragile" ex-girlfriend, Maisie Aldrin, the access code to their penthouse. He expects Wren to be understanding. Patient. Quiet. What Sterling doesn't realize is that Wren isn't the mild-mannered consultant he thinks she is. She's the hidden sole heir to the Calloway Trust — a billion-dollar real estate dynasty that owns the building they live in, the block it sits on, and the firm where Sterling's biggest client leases office space. Now Maisie is leaving lipstick on Wren's wine glasses, rearranging furniture in Wren's guest room, and texting Sterling with "emergencies" every night at midnight. Wren gave Sterling one chance to fix it. He chose Maisie. So Wren will dismantle everything — the penthouse, the marriage, and the career Sterling built — piece by piece. But when she starts pulling threads, she discovers Maisie isn't just a lovesick ex. She's running a con. And Sterling might not be the villain Wren thinks he is. By then, it might be too late to stop what she's already set in motion.

Chapter 1 of My Husband Gave Our Penthouse Key to His Ex

The blood orange split cleanly under my knife, its crimson flesh catching the light like something wounded.

I was halfway through the second one when Sterling said it.

"I gave Maisie the door code. She's moving into the guest suite tonight."

The knife stopped. Not because my hand flinched — my hand never flinches — but because I made it stop. I kept my eyes on the orange. On the way the juice pooled against the cutting board, dark and slow.

I counted to three.

"Which Maisie?" I asked.

My voice came out the way I intended it to. Calm. Slightly curious. Like he'd mentioned a weather forecast I hadn't checked.

I already knew which Maisie. There was only ever one Maisie in any conversation involving Sterling Calloway. Maisie Aldrin. Twenty-nine years old. Art consultant. Sterling's college girlfriend, the one who came up in exactly three conversations in our eighteen months together, always framed as ancient history, always mentioned with that particular careful neutrality men use when something is not actually ancient history at all.

I looked up.

Something moved across his face — a small recalibration, the expression of a man who'd prepared for a different reaction. He'd been ready for cold silence, maybe. Sharp words. He hadn't been ready for this.

"Maisie Aldrin," he said. "You've met her — at the Hendersons' thing last spring, remember? She just had a small surgery. Her apartment's being renovated, and she doesn't have family in New York. It's only two weeks, Wren. I couldn't exactly say no."

I watched his eyes while he spoke.

When he said *small surgery*, they drifted — down and to the left, just for a fraction of a second. A microexpression I'd catalogued long before I ever agreed to marry him. I'd spent three months studying Sterling Calloway before our first date. Not because I was obsessive. Because I was careful. There's a difference.

"Of course," I said. I set the knife down on the board. "She needs help. I understand."

I turned to the sink and ran water over my hands. Behind me, I heard him exhale.

I picked up my phone.

Our building — a fourteen-story prewar on the Upper West Side that Sterling believed we co-owned, when in fact the entirety of it was held in a Calloway Trust under my name — ran a smart access system I'd had installed two years before we started dating. Biometric entry logs. Time-stamped. Searchable.

I opened the admin panel.

I found Maisie Aldrin's profile in under ten seconds.

Fingerprint registered: seventy-two hours ago. 11:47 a.m.

I stood very still at the counter. Outside, the city moved in its usual indifferent way, taxis and wind and someone's scaffolding rattling five floors down. Inside, the kitchen felt very quiet.

11:47 a.m., three days ago.

Our ceremony had started at noon.

While I was standing in a borrowed dress in a registrar's office on Centre Street, while Sterling was holding my hand and saying the words, he had already given another woman a key to my home. Not our home. Mine. The building I owned outright, the apartment I'd lived in for four years before I ever let him move a single piece of furniture through the door.

On our wedding day.

I placed my phone face-down on the counter.

When I turned around, Sterling had already moved toward me. He pressed his lips to my forehead — warm, easy, the gesture of a man who believed he'd been forgiven for something he didn't know I knew.

"You are," he said, pulling back with a small smile, "the most reasonable woman I have ever met."

I smiled back at him. It was a very good smile. I'd practiced it.

"Go pick her up," I said. "She shouldn't have to take a cab if she's just had surgery."

He grabbed his keys off the hook by the door. The elevator hummed. The lobby door clicked shut behind him.

The smile left my face.

I stood in the kitchen for exactly four seconds. Then I picked up my phone again and pulled up a contact I hadn't called in six weeks.

Julian Reeves. Head of security, Calloway Trust. Former military intelligence. The kind of man who answered on the first ring at eleven o'clock at night and asked no unnecessary questions.

He picked up on the second ring.

"Julian," I said. "Activate the Attic Protocol. I need full access logs for unit twenty-seven starting tonight. Entry and exit records, network usage, phone traffic on the building's shared infrastructure. Report to me every six hours."

A brief pause. Not hesitation — Julian didn't hesitate. He was processing.

"Target identity?" he asked.

I looked at the access panel still open on my screen. Maisie Aldrin. Registered user. Guest status.

"My husband's ex-girlfriend," I said. "She was registered to this building three days ago. On my wedding day. She's moving into the guest suite tonight."

Another pause. Shorter this time.

"Understood," Julian said. "First report by five a.m."

I ended the call.

The guest suite was at the end of the hall — what Sterling had always called *the spare room* in the two years he'd lived here, which told me everything about how little he understood the space he occupied. I walked down the hall and pushed the door open.

The room was different.

Not dramatically. Someone unfamiliar with it might not have noticed. But the top drawer of the dresser — where I kept extra linens — was slightly open, the way a drawer left by someone in a hurry sits. The closet was no longer empty. Four hangers held clothes I didn't recognize: a pale silk blouse, dark trousers, a cashmere cardigan the color of old cream.

She hadn't moved in tonight. She'd already moved in.

I turned toward the nightstand.

The prescription bottle was small, amber plastic, the kind that catches light badly. I picked it up. The label was recent — filled four days ago at a pharmacy on East 72nd Street.

I read the medication name twice.

Flecainide acetate. An antiarrhythmic. Used in cases of serious cardiac rhythm disorders — the kind that didn't resolve on their own, the kind that meant monitoring, restriction, caution.

I set the bottle back on the nightstand. Precisely where I'd found it.

Then I pulled up Maisie Aldrin's Instagram on my phone. Her account was public. Of course it was.

Three weeks ago, she'd posted a race-day photo. Running shoes. A finisher's medal. Her arms raised at a half-marathon finish line, grinning, flushed, every inch the picture of someone whose heart was working exactly as it should.

I looked at the pill bottle.

I looked at the photograph.

Maisie Aldrin didn't run half-marathons with a cardiac arrhythmia. And she didn't develop one in three weeks.

So the question wasn't whether she was sick.

The question was what, exactly, she was pretending to be sick *for*.

I turned off the light and pulled the guest room door shut behind me.

Somewhere downstairs, a car pulled up to the building entrance. I heard it through the window — the particular sound of Sterling's engine, low and familiar, idling at the curb.

I walked back to the kitchen and picked up my knife.

The blood orange was still there, waiting to be finished.

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