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When My Ex Claimed Me as His Wife in Public
When My Ex Claimed Me as His Wife in Public

When My Ex Claimed Me as His Wife in Public

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The flowers were white dahlias and eucalyptus, and they smelled like something I couldn't name — clean and a little cold, the way late October in New York always feels right before it turns mean. The rooftop was strung with warm lights, and Central Park spread out below us like a painting someone had the nerve to make real. It was the kind of setting that made people believe in things. I was not in the business of believing in things anymore. But I could appreciate the view. 'You're tilting,' Haisley said from the corner of her mouth, not looking at me. She was radiant in ivory silk, her bouquet held with the white-knuckled grip of someone who had been planning this day for fourteen months and was not about to let a crooked maid of honor ruin the photos. 'I'm not tilting,' I said. 'Your left shoulder is lower than your right.' I adjusted. Mango, perched against that same left shoulder, made a sound of mild protest and grabbed a fistful of my hair.

Chapter 1 of When My Ex Claimed Me as His Wife in Public

The flowers were white dahlias and eucalyptus, and they smelled like something I couldn't name — clean and a little cold, the way late October in New York always feels right before it turns mean. The rooftop was strung with warm lights, and Central Park spread out below us like a painting someone had the nerve to make real. It was the kind of setting that made people believe in things.

I was not in the business of believing in things anymore. But I could appreciate the view.

'You're tilting,' Haisley said from the corner of her mouth, not looking at me. She was radiant in ivory silk, her bouquet held with the white-knuckled grip of someone who had been planning this day for fourteen months and was not about to let a crooked maid of honor ruin the photos.

'I'm not tilting,' I said.

'Your left shoulder is lower than your right.'

I adjusted. Mango, perched against that same left shoulder, made a sound of mild protest and grabbed a fistful of my hair.

'Mama,' she announced, to no one in particular and everyone within earshot.

She was two years old and built like a small, determined storm system. Her actual mother, my colleague Priya, was somewhere near the back row trying to keep her other kid from eating the centerpiece. Mango had decided, sometime around the cocktail hour, that I was hers. I had stopped arguing about it twenty minutes ago.

'She's going to pull your updo out,' Haisley said.

'She's going to try,' I said, and gently unwound the small fingers from my hair. Mango considered this, decided it was acceptable, and settled her cheek back against my shoulder with the boneless satisfaction of someone who had won.

I laughed. Quietly, just to myself. It surprised me a little — the way it came up without warning, loose and real.

That was when I looked up.

I don't know why I looked up at that exact moment. Maybe it was the laugh. Maybe some part of me that I keep very carefully locked up recognized something in the air before my brain did. Whatever the reason, I looked across the reception hall, past the clusters of guests in their autumn colors, past the bar cart and the string quartet and the small children being bribed with cake — and I found him.

Zane Hoffman.

He was seated at the table nearest the bride's family, which told me he was someone important to Haisley's world. He was in a dark suit, no tie, the top button of his shirt open in the way that looked careless and wasn't. He looked exactly the same. He looked completely different. Four years had settled into him like weight that suited him — the kind of weight that makes a man look more like himself rather than less.

He was already looking at me.

Four years. Four years of London rain and MBA case studies and learning to sleep through the night again. Four years of building something that was entirely mine, brick by careful brick, until I almost forgot what it felt like to have it all come down at once.

Four years, and it took about three seconds for all of it to compress into a single point of pressure behind my sternum.

His expression fractured. Just for a second — a hairline crack across the controlled surface of his face, there and gone so fast that anyone who hadn't spent years memorizing that face would have missed it entirely. I didn't miss it.

Then his eyes dropped.

First to Mango, warm and heavy against my shoulder, her small hand curled into the fabric of my dress. Then to my left hand, which was angled away from him, hidden by the curve of my body. I watched him try to see it. I watched him fail.

I turned away.

Not fast. Not like I was running. Deliberately, unhurriedly, the way you turn away from something that doesn't concern you anymore. I adjusted Mango against my shoulder and said something to the woman beside me about the flowers, and I did not look back.

Three feet away, Haisley went very still.

I could feel her looking at me the way she always looks at me when she thinks she's figured something out — that particular quality of attention, focused and quiet, like a cat that has just spotted movement in the grass. I kept my face easy. I kept my jaw relaxed. I was fine. I was completely fine.

My jaw was set about a fraction too tight and I knew it and there was nothing I could do about it.

Haisley said nothing. She filed it away. I could practically hear the sound of it.

---

The toasts were warm and a little too long, the way wedding toasts always are. I drank my champagne and held Mango and smiled at the right moments. I was good at this. I had gotten very good at this.

It was during the quiet stretch between the last toast and the first dance that he found me.

I was at the bar, my back to the room, ordering a club soda because I had already decided I was going to need my full faculties tonight. I heard him before I saw him — not his footsteps, but the particular way the ambient noise of the room shifted slightly, the way people unconsciously adjust their posture when someone with that kind of gravity enters their immediate orbit.

I picked up my glass.

'You look well.' His voice was exactly the same. Low, controlled, leaving no room for negotiation.

'I am well,' I said, and turned around.

Up close, the four years were more visible. A little more tension around the eyes. Something in the set of his mouth that hadn't been there before. He looked like a man who had been very busy and very tired and was not going to tell anyone about either.

He looked at Mango, who was now regarding him with the frank, unblinking assessment of a toddler who has not yet learned to pretend.

'Yours?' he said.

The word was casual. His hands, at his sides, were not.

I looked at him for a moment. I thought about the three-second fracture I had watched move across his face from across the room. I thought about four years. I thought about a lot of things.

'What a question,' I said pleasantly.

His jaw tightened. 'Katalina.'

'It's a beautiful wedding, isn't it?' I said. 'Haisley really outdid herself with the dahlias.'

I watched something move behind his eyes — frustration, and underneath it, something rawer that he was working very hard to keep below the surface. He had always been good at that. So had I, now.

'Who is the child's father?' he said.

His voice was still controlled. Barely.

I smiled. It was a real smile, which was the worst kind to give him, because he knew the difference.

'Enjoy the reception, Zane,' I said, and walked away.

Mango twisted to look back at him over my shoulder and waved one small hand. I did not turn around. But I felt his gaze on my back all the way across the room, steady and unblinking, like something that had been waiting a very long time and had just decided to stop being patient.

The first small revenge tasted better than I expected.

I was still thinking about that — the clean, sharp satisfaction of it, and the complicated thing underneath that I wasn't ready to name — when Haisley appeared at my elbow near the end of the night, her bouquet slightly wilted, her expression carrying the specific guilt of someone who has been sitting on information and has run out of time to keep sitting on it.

'I need to tell you something,' she said.

'Okay,' I said.

'Hoffman Capital has a minority stake in my startup.'

I looked at her.

'The investment deal,' she continued, slightly faster now, 'the one I need to close to get through the next eighteen months — it needs a personal sign-off. From him.' A pause. 'I found out two weeks ago. I was going to tell you before tonight but then I thought maybe he wouldn't come and then he came and—'

'Haisley.'

'I'm sorry,' she said. 'I'm really sorry, Kat.'

I looked out across the rooftop. The lights were warm. The park was dark and enormous below us. Somewhere behind me, the string quartet was playing something slow.

At my side, hidden in the fold of my dress, my fingers found the seam and straightened it. Once. Twice. Three times.

'It's fine,' I said.

My voice was perfectly steady.

It was not fine.

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