The Hospital Wristbands That Stopped a Billionaire in His Tracks-hothiyenvy_5

Damon Vexley entered Mount Sinai Hospital with the kind of fury that usually made people step backward before he said a word.

The rain had followed him all the way from Tribeca.

It clung to the shoulders of his $4,000 coat, darkened the wool at the cuffs, and dripped onto the polished lobby floor while the night security guard searched for the visitor sign-in sheet.

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The lobby smelled like disinfectant, wet umbrellas, and coffee that had been left too long on a warmer.

Damon noticed all of it because noticing details had built his life.

Details had turned a rented Brooklyn office with bad heat into Vexley Pharmaceuticals.

Details had helped him survive senators, hostile investors, federal investigators, and men who smiled warmly while trying to take pieces of his company.

Damon Vexley did not lose control in public.

That was what he told himself as he wrote his name on the visitor log hard enough to split the line of ink.

Thirty minutes earlier, Damon had been standing in his penthouse with a glass of untouched bourbon and a stack of settlement revisions when his private phone rang.

Not the office number.

Not the number his assistants screened.

The private number.

Only family, his chief counsel, and a few people from the life he no longer admitted he missed had ever had it.

The woman on the phone did not introduce herself.

“Sylvie Vexley was admitted two hours ago,” she said. “Room 203. You need to come now.”

Then the line clicked dead.

For nearly ten seconds, Damon stood there with the phone against his ear and listened to nothing.

Seven months divorced.

Seven months gone.

Seven months since Sylvie had walked out with two suitcases, a gray scarf, and the terrible calm of a woman who had already cried herself empty somewhere else.

Seven months of attorneys.

Seven months of property documents.

Seven months of couriered envelopes that arrived without handwritten notes, without phone calls, and without any trace of the woman who used to leave her coffee on his desk because she knew he would forget breakfast.

He had thrown most of those envelopes into the bottom drawer of his study.

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