Chapter1
PRESENT
When I walked into the boardroom, I saw her face go pale, and his face was just as stoic as I remembered. I took a seat and set the folders onto the table. She leaned over and rested her hands on his arm, and I almost rolled my eyes.
“Mr. Green: Does your assistant need to sit in on this meeting?” She asked; she still had that same condescending tone she always had, which reminded me why I hated her.
“Ms. Davis, I believe there is a misunderstanding; Ms. Vale isn't mine or anyone else’s assistant. Ms. Vale is one of the senior executives," Arnold replied, and I saw her mask slip before she recovered instantly.
I could feel his eyes on me the entire meeting but didn't pay any attention to him; he was the past, a memory locked away and forgotten, and that was the way it would stay. After the meeting ended, everyone left, or so I thought. When I looked up, he was still sitting there, and she was beside him.
“Tanya, why don’t you go ahead? I need to speak to Ms. Vale,” he said, his voice low and cold.
“Of course, Killian,” she said, gently touching his arms again. It was a possessive move she has done forever. I sat looking at the man before me.
Killian Ashford had the kind of presence that silenced a room before he ever spoke. At six foot three, he carried himself with the unshakable confidence of a man who owned not just the building he stood in, but the air around it. Broad shoulders filled the cut of his charcoal suit, every line of the fabric tailored to precision, hiding those tattoos that would make a tattoo artist amazed. It was as if luxury itself had been molded to his frame.
His features were cut sharp, elegant high cheekbones, a jawline carved with precision, and lips too full to be anything but distracting. But it was his eyes that unsettled people most; they used to unsettle me too. A pale, ice-gray so piercing they seemed to see straight through skin and bone.
Dark hair, thick and slightly unruly at the edges, brushed against his temple, giving him an untamed quality that no amount of money could polish away.
A faint scar traced the edge of his brow, the only imperfection on a face that otherwise seemed untouchable, and I knew the story behind it. He was magnetic and dangerous in equal measure; he was the kind of man you couldn’t look away from, even when you knew you should.
“So you’re back?” He asked, his voice low but still somehow echoing throughout the room.
“What do you want, Killian? I don’t have time for you and your f****d-up games.”
“Games? You are right. It was all a f*****g game to you,” he said, his voice raising, but I wasn't afraid of him; I never was. I saw the true Killian six years ago in a moment of weakness. He never allowed anyone to get close except Tanya, and it seems like that was still the case.
“If you still believe every word of hers after all these years, then you’re still as blind and f*****g stupid as you were. "We have nothing to talk about," I said as I stood up from the conference table.
One minute he was sitting across from me, and the next he was standing in front of me. His six-foot-three body dwarfed my five-foot one, but it didn't bother me. It never did. He rested his hands around me onto the conference table, trapping me. He leaned forward with practiced ease and looked down at me.
“Why wouldn’t I believe her? She is my best friend and has always been honest. You were my f*****g wife, and you were deceitful,” he said with a growl. I looked him dead in the eyes, and he looked away. He hated that I was never affected, that I could look him square in the eyes. I was the only person that ever dared to.
“Tell me, Killian? How did I deceive you? In what way?. I married you, but it was a contract, and I kept my end up. If you couldn't see it then and you still don't see it now, then I suggest you think long and hard. How many of your relationships ended? How many women lasted?” I asked confidently.
He pulled away and stood straight. “Leave her alone, or I swear I will f*****g ruin you, Nova,” he said as he opened the door and walked out. Jesus, I knew I would see him and her but didn't expect it on my first day back in the States.
That afternoon when I left Meridian Capital, I stopped at the flower shop and then drove over to the cemetery. I parked the car and walked in; I stopped at the grave and placed the flowers.
“Hi, Mom, Sorry I haven’t visited, but I was busy with work, but I’m back now, and I promise I’ll visit often. I know Vera has been visiting you.” I sat beside her grave and updated her on what I had been up to. If it had all gone well, she would still be alive and with me. I stayed there a while longer. Before leaving the cemetery, I walked two more rows over and looked at the headstone. The tears threatened to spill.
I stooped down and cleared the wilted flower petals away and placed the fresh flowers. Zachary. I stood up and left the cemetery. Once in my car, I cried. I let the tears consume me. I cried for the love I lost, for the life I could have had, for the happiness I could have had, for my mother, and for the years I spent alone.
After my crying fit, I started the car and left. It was Friday night, and the streets were busy. I worked my ass off to afford this; it was a state-of-the-art residential tower, and my unit was all the way at the top. It was an exclusive high-rise. There was only one other unit on my floor, and it was private.
After a much-needed shower and dinner, I poured myself a glass of wine and stood on the balcony looking out over midtown Manhattan. Billionaire’s Row, to be exact. Tanya always droned on about this area, but she could never afford it. I didn't understand why Killian never bought her a place since he was so caring of her.
I stood there, the wind against my face as I drank my wine. Nova Vale, thirty years old and divorced. From the outside it looked like I had my life together and I was happy, but that was far from it.
The only reason I was standing here was because of Killian, because of his hurtful words, and because of his family and Tanya. Because of him, I lost two people that I truly cared for.
My mind took me back to then, six years ago. I should have never signed that contract, never agreed. I was desperate, and in desperate times people do desperate things, and my desperation led me to marry Killian Ashford.