The Stranger He Became

I woke to the sound of activity in the kitchen—the gentle clatter of pans, the whisper of gas flames igniting. For a moment, lying in that enormous silk-draped bed, I let myself imagine it was Theron making coffee the way he used to, humming under his breath while he burned toast.

But reality crashed back quickly. This wasn't our tiny studio apartment with the temperamental stove. This was his fortress, and I was just another unwanted guest.

I slipped out of bed and padded barefoot to the kitchen, drawn by muscle memory and desperate hope. Maybe if I could do something familiar, something that reminded him of who we used to be together, I could find a crack in his armor.

The kitchen was a monument to culinary perfection—marble countertops that gleamed like mirrors, appliances that probably cost more than most people's cars, and a staff of three already preparing what looked like a five-course breakfast.

They stopped when they saw me, their expressions politely confused.

"Miss?" The head chef, a stern woman with steel-gray hair, looked me up and down. "Can we help you with something?"

"I just thought... I wanted to make breakfast. For Theron." The words sounded pathetic even to my own ears.

The staff exchanged glances. "Mr. Wolfe has very specific dietary requirements," the chef said carefully. "We have everything handled."

But I was already moving, muscle memory guiding my hands to the refrigerator. "Just eggs. Scrambled eggs. He used to love them when I made them with a little cream cheese, just a touch of chives..."

I could feel them watching me as I worked, their discomfort palpable. But for a few precious minutes, standing at that gleaming stove with a whisk in my hand, I could pretend we were twenty-two again. I could pretend he might walk into the kitchen and wrap his arms around me from behind, pressing his face into my neck while I cooked.

The eggs turned out perfectly—fluffy, creamy, exactly the way he used to like them. I plated them carefully on expensive china, added a garnish of fresh chives, and carried the plate through the penthouse like an offering.

I found him in his dining room, already seated at that massive table with a spread that could have fed a small army. He was reading something on his tablet, a cup of coffee steaming beside his elbow, looking every inch the powerful businessman in his perfectly pressed shirt and tie.

"Theron?" I approached hesitantly, the plate warm in my hands. "I made you breakfast. The way you used to like it."

He looked up slowly, his gaze moving from my face to the plate and back again. For a heartbeat, I thought I saw something flicker in his eyes—recognition, maybe, or the ghost of a softer time.

Then his expression hardened.

"Chef Laurent," he called, never taking his eyes off me.

The head chef appeared instantly, as if she'd been waiting in the wings. "Yes, Mr. Wolfe?"

"Please dispose of this." He gestured dismissively at the plate in my hands. "And remind the kitchen staff that no unauthorized personnel are allowed to prepare food in my home."

The words hit me like ice water. "Theron, I just thought—"

"You thought wrong." He returned to his tablet, his voice casual and cutting. "I have a staff of trained professionals to handle my needs. I don't require... amateur efforts."

Chef Laurent took the plate from my numb fingers with professional efficiency, her face carefully blank. I watched her walk away with those perfect eggs, knowing they'd end up in the garbage without ever being tasted.

"I have women like you for other purposes," Theron continued, still not looking at me. "Domestic services are not among them."

The casual cruelty of it—the way he reduced me to a category, a function—made my throat close up. I stood there for a moment longer, hoping he might look up, might show some flicker of the man who used to smile when I surprised him with breakfast.

But he didn't. He just kept reading, sipping his coffee, existing in a world where I was nothing more than an unwelcome interruption.

* * *

The charity gala that evening was a display of wealth so obscene it made my head spin. The Metropolitan Museum had been transformed into a glittering wonderland of crystal and gold, filled with Manhattan's elite in gowns that cost more than most people's annual salaries.

I stood in the guest room, staring at the single dress hanging in the otherwise empty closet—a simple black cocktail dress I'd bought years ago for work functions in São Paulo. It was perfectly respectable, even elegant in its simplicity, but surrounded by all this opulence, it felt like wearing burlap to a ball.

Theron appeared in my doorway without knocking, resplendent in a tuxedo that had clearly been tailored specifically for his body. He looked like he'd stepped off the cover of a magazine—powerful, untouchable, devastatingly handsome.

"Ready?" he asked, but his tone suggested he didn't particularly care about my answer.

The ride to the museum was silent except for the purr of the engine and the soft jazz playing through the car's premium sound system. Theron stared out the window, his fingers drumming against his knee in a rhythm I didn't recognize. I sat as far from him as the backseat would allow, acutely aware of the space between us.

At the museum, photographers' flashes exploded like fireworks as we stepped out of the car. But they weren't taking pictures of me—they were capturing Theron, the self-made billionaire, the man who'd built an empire from nothing.

Vivienne materialized at his side the moment we entered the museum, stunning in a gown that probably cost more than my father's house. She slipped her arm through Theron's with practiced ease, her smile brilliant and possessive.

"Darling," she purred, pressing a kiss to his cheek that left a perfect lipstick mark. "You look absolutely devastating tonight."

Theron's smile in response was warm, genuine—the first real smile I'd seen from him since my return. It was like watching sunlight break through storm clouds, beautiful and painful because it wasn't meant for me.

"And you look exquisite," he replied, his voice carrying an intimacy that made my chest ache.

I followed them through the crowd like a shadow, invisible and unnecessary. Theron worked the room with Vivienne on his arm, charming donors and socialites with the kind of effortless charisma that had always made me fall a little more in love with him. But now that charm felt weaponized, calculated.

When we reached our table, I realized with sinking dread that I wouldn't be sitting with them. Instead, I was directed to a table in the back corner, surrounded by women who looked like they'd stepped off the pages of fashion magazines.

"Oh my God," one of them—a redhead with emerald earrings that caught the light like fire—leaned forward with predatory interest. "You're her, aren't you? The one from before."

The others turned to stare at me with the kind of fascination usually reserved for car accidents. I felt like a specimen under a microscope.

"I'm sorry?" I managed.

"The ex-girlfriend," another one chimed in, her voice bright with malicious curiosity. "The one who broke his heart and ran off to South America. We've heard so much about you."

My face burned. "I didn't—it wasn't like that."

"Oh, honey," the redhead's smile was sharp as glass. "We all know exactly what it was like. The question is, what made you think you could come back?"

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