He Found His Ex-Wife With a Newborn and a Letter in His Bedroom-hothiyenvy_5

Vincent DeVoe knew how to enter a room and make every person in it understand who controlled the air.

He had learned that long before the magazine profiles called him ruthless, brilliant, impossible, and privately afraid of nothing.

He learned it in conference rooms where silence could cost more than a house.

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He learned it on red-eye flights with contracts open on his lap and coffee cooling untouched beside him.

He learned it at the head of polished tables, watching older men smile like fathers and negotiate like wolves.

But at 4:17 p.m. on a Friday afternoon, when the private elevator opened into his Manhattan penthouse, Vincent walked into his own home and lost control before he had even taken off his coat.

The apartment was quiet.

Not the kind of quiet that meant luxury.

The wrong kind.

The late sunlight hit the glass walls and turned the floor pale gold.

Traffic moved far below, horns blurring into one long restless sound.

His briefcase still smelled faintly of airport leather and stale coffee, and his phone was already vibrating again in his pocket because his assistant, Rebecca, had learned years ago that Vincent did not ignore calls unless he was either negotiating or furious.

He ignored it.

The bedroom door was cracked open.

That was the first thing that should not have been true.

Vincent lived in a world of closed doors, coded locks, scheduled access, and people who knew better than to surprise him.

He crossed the hall slowly.

Then he saw her.

Sloan Bennett was asleep in his bed.

For one second, his mind refused to put her name beside the woman in front of him.

Sloan had always been color and motion in his memory.

Bare feet in his kitchen.

Vanilla in her hair.

A laugh in the elevator when he forgot what floor they were on because she had leaned against him and told him he looked like a man who needed one ordinary day.

This woman looked like that same life after it had been wrung dry.

She was thinner.

Paler.

Her honey-blonde hair had been twisted into a messy knot, with loose strands stuck near her temples.

She wore one of his old gray cashmere sweaters, the sleeves too long, the shoulders slipping, the fabric making her look smaller than she had any right to look in his house.

Then he saw what she held.

A baby.

The briefcase slipped out of Vincent’s hand and hit the marble floor.

The crack sounded enormous.

The baby jerked awake and began to cry.

Sloan’s eyes opened at once.

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