Thrown Away Pregnant, She Met the One Man Nick Feared Most-olive

The pen fell before Adeline understood that her marriage was over.

It slipped from her fingers, struck the glass desk once, and rolled toward the silver paperweight Nick Drayke kept near the corner of his office.

The paperweight was shaped like a hawk.

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Nick had bought it after his first major acquisition, back when Adeline still believed his hunger meant ambition and not cruelty.

Now the hawk’s polished wings reflected her face in broken pieces.

The office on the fortieth floor was cold enough to make her hands stiff.

Rain blurred Stonebridge Coastal City beyond the windows, turning towers, traffic lights, and the gray harbor into wet streaks of color.

Adeline was six months pregnant with triplets, sitting in a leather chair that suddenly felt too wide, too expensive, too far from any life where she mattered.

Nick’s lawyer cleared his throat.

He had been speaking for twelve minutes.

Adeline had heard every word and understood almost none of it at first.

Then the meaning settled into her bones.

She had twenty-four hours to vacate the apartment.

She would waive any claim to the car, the joint accounts, the coastal property, and the furnishings inside the apartment she had chosen, arranged, and lived in for five years.

She would accept temporary support.

That phrase kept floating above the desk, clean and sterile.

Temporary support.

It sounded like help.

It meant abandonment dressed in legal grammar.

Nick did not look at her while the lawyer spoke.

He sat across from her in a dark suit, scrolling through his phone, his cufflinks flashing under the ceiling lights.

Adeline remembered buttoning those cuffs for him before a hospital fundraiser two years earlier.

She remembered standing behind him in a mirror and thinking he looked tired, not distant.

That was before Sienna.

That was before the magazine photos, the yacht rumors, the charity gala whispers, and the first night Nick did not come home at all.

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