She Paid $150,000 to Save Her Marriage. Then His Ex Arrived-eirian

The private dock in the Florida Keys looked like the kind of place where rich couples went to pretend their problems could not follow them across water.

Bright planks stretched over blue-green waves.

A white seaplane rocked gently beside the platform, its propeller still, its windows catching flashes of sun.

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The air smelled like salt, hot rope, sunscreen, and the faint chemical sweetness of aviation fuel.

Lydia Harrison stood with her sunglasses in her hand and watched her husband turn their fifth anniversary into a public lesson in how little he respected her.

“You’re going to cook and clean while we enjoy the beach, Lydia,” Caleb said. “That’s what a wife is for.”

The words did not come quietly.

They were not muttered in a private argument or buried under an apology.

He said them in front of his mother, Doña Graciela, in front of his father, Margot, in front of Tessa, the woman he had dated in college, and in front of the pilot waiting to fly them to the island Lydia had reserved.

For a moment, Lydia could hear everything too clearly.

The flap of a small flag on the dock office.

The creak of the seaplane against its mooring.

The tiny metal click her sunglasses made when her fingers tightened too hard around the hinge.

That click stayed with her longer than the insult.

It sounded like something giving way.

Lydia and Caleb had been married for five years.

From the outside, they looked like a couple who had solved life early.

They had the Harbor District dinners, the sleek car, the Italian shirts, the smiling photos in expensive restaurants, and the kind of home where people asked who designed the kitchen instead of whether anyone was happy inside it.

Caleb liked to be seen.

He liked watches with weight, valet tickets with logos, and waiters who remembered his name.

He liked the way people assumed money followed him into rooms.

Lydia had once found that charming.

At the beginning, Caleb had been warm in a way that felt like rest.

He brought coffee to her tiny West End apartment when she was still building her cybersecurity company from a folding table.

He drove her to client meetings when her old car stalled.

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