The city skyline glittered behind the glass walls of the Ashford Foundation Gala, but for the first time in my life, the lights outside didn’t matter.
Because inside, she was everywhere.
Elara. My ex-wife. My mistake. My undoing.
I spotted her the moment I stepped into the hall. She moved with effortless grace, laughing lightly at something a man said—tall, elegant, her gown hugging her like it had been made for her alone. Heads turned. People whispered. And I… I froze.
She didn’t look at me. Not once. Not a flicker.
I had expected a glare. A challenge. A snide remark. But she treated me like I didn’t exist. Like I had never been her husband.
The words I had once thrown at her—the insults, the dismissals—played in my mind like a broken record. You’re nothing. You’re replaceable. You’ll always come back.
She hadn’t.
I clenched my fists. My suit suddenly felt tight. My chest ached. My throat was dry. I wanted to storm across the room, grab her arm, demand she listen—but the moment I opened my mouth, she turned toward another man, laughing like the sun itself had chosen her as its stage.
A rival of mine, Marcus Hale, leaned close, clearly impressed. “You know,” he said, voice low, “I’ve never seen her like this before. She’s… glowing.”
I swallowed hard, anger and fear knotting together in my stomach. Glowing? Glowing without me?
I stepped forward, then hesitated. I couldn’t just walk up and speak. Not here. Not now. The room was full of people who knew me as the man who controlled everything. And I—Julian Ashford—couldn’t control anything about this moment.
I watched her every move, memorizing the tilt of her head, the way her laughter rose and fell, the curve of her smile that had once been mine alone.
Then she glanced up. And for a heartbeat… our eyes met.
It wasn’t longing. It wasn’t anger. It was curiosity.
A smile danced at the corner of her lips. A polite, confident smile that said: I know you’re watching, but I am untouchable.
My stomach twisted. Untouchable. That word repeated itself in my head like a warning I refused to heed.
And then Marcus Hale leaned closer to her, hand brushing hers lightly. She didn’t pull away.
I couldn’t think. I couldn’t breathe. Every instinct I had screamed at me to stop him, to intervene, to reclaim what I had thrown away.
I made a decision I would immediately regret.
I strode forward, cutting through the crowd, my steps purposeful. People parted instinctively. I wasn’t just a man in this room anymore—I was a storm.
“Elara!” I barked, louder than I intended.
The chatter died. Heads turned. Glasses paused mid-air. And she… froze.
Her smile faltered. The polite mask cracked just slightly.
She looked at me—not the man she had once called her husband, not the man she had endured—but at a stranger desperate and unrecognizable.
My heart hammered. I wanted to grab her, plead, yell, grovel. But the words wouldn’t come.
Then she raised an eyebrow, her lips curving into a slow, knowing smile, and I realized—she wasn’t the one who would be shaken tonight.
I was.
And in that frozen moment, under the gaze of hundreds, I realized she might never forgive me… and worse, she might not even want me back.