A CEO Tried To Ignore His Jealousy Until One Emerald Dress Exposed Him-hothiyenvy_5

The night Monica Cain wore the short emerald dress to Nathan Devereaux’s company party, every man in the ballroom suddenly remembered how to look at her.

The dress was not reckless.

It was not cheap.

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It was the kind of dress a woman buys when she is tired of being seen only as capable.

Emerald satin, clean lines, simple heels, nothing loud except the confidence it gave her when she walked through the ballroom doors.

The chandelier light slid over her shoulders.

Champagne glasses chimed near the bar.

Somewhere close to the windows, a string quartet played softly enough that everyone could pretend they were not watching her.

Nathan Devereaux was not pretending well.

He stood across the room in a black tuxedo, one hand wrapped around a glass of untouched champagne, his steel-gray eyes fixed on Monica as if the Manhattan skyline had gone completely blank behind her.

Nathan was the kind of man people noticed before he spoke.

Millionaire founder of Devereaux & Associates.

Brilliant.

Exacting.

Controlled to the point of coldness.

He had built his company by noticing everything before anyone else did, but that night, he seemed to notice only Monica.

Then James Harrison from marketing leaned too close to her.

James was handsome in the easy, office-party way some men are handsome when they believe the room will forgive them for taking up too much space.

He smiled at Monica near the windows, angled his body just enough to make the conversation look private, and asked if she would let him take her to dinner after the party.

Monica gave him a polite smile.

Not a yes.

Not a no.

Just the careful pause women learn when a man asks a question in public and makes refusal feel like a performance.

Across the room, Nathan’s jaw tightened.

The muscle jumped once.

Then again.

Monica saw it.

She saw the champagne glass still untouched in his hand.

She saw the way his eyes moved from James’s face to James’s hand near her elbow.

And suddenly the truth she had spent six weeks refusing to name stood in the ballroom with both hands raised.

Nathan Devereaux was jealous.

Not mildly jealous.

Not professionally uncomfortable.

Jealous in the dangerous, unguarded way of a man who had been pretending for weeks that he did not want her, only to discover the rest of the world wanted her too.

But the night did not begin in that ballroom.

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