A low murmur of voices suddenly broke through the rhythmic splashing of the courtyard fountain.
Francesca froze. She turned her head, her eyes tracking the sound through the meticulously manicured boxwood maze.
The estate was supposed to be empty outside. The main party had moved indoors hours ago.
Through a gap in the tall green hedges, illuminated by the pale glow of a wrought-iron streetlamp, she saw him.
Emery.
Her husband's tall, broad-shouldered silhouette stood with his back to the light. Even in the shadows, his posture carried that rigid, untouchable authority of a corporate CEO.
Standing directly across from him was Catalina Witt.
Catalina, the beloved daughter of a family friend. Catalina, the woman who was about to marry Emery's younger brother, Hudson.
Catalina wore a flimsy, backless silk evening gown. She had her arms wrapped tightly around her own torso, her shoulders trembling as she practically shrank into the cold air.
Francesca watched, her breath catching in her throat, as Emery moved.
He didn't hesitate. He unbuttoned his custom Savile Row suit jacket with swift, practiced movements. He slipped it off his broad shoulders, the expensive fabric catching the dim light.
With a gentleness Francesca had never experienced in their three years of marriage, Emery draped the heavy jacket over Catalina's bare shoulders.
Catalina tilted her head up. Her eyes were slightly red, and she offered Emery a smile that was so incredibly fragile and wronged it made Francesca's stomach turn.
Emery slowly raised his right hand. His long fingers hovered in the air, inching toward Catalina's cheek.
He stopped. His hand remained suspended, a millimeter away from her skin, a picture of absolute, agonizing restraint.
He murmured something low. The wind snatched the words away before they could reach Francesca's ears.
But she didn't need to hear the words. The look on Emery's face was enough.
The sharp angles of his jaw were softened by a rare, devastating tenderness. It was a look of pure, undivided devotion. A look that sliced through Francesca's chest like a dull, rusted blade.
He had never looked at her like that. Not on their wedding day. Not in their bed. Never.
Francesca's fingers curled inward. Her perfectly manicured nails dug so fiercely into her palms that the skin threatened to split. The physical pain in her hands was the only thing keeping her grounded.
She had given this man three years. Three years of playing the dutiful wife, of swallowing her pride, of pretending she didn't see the way his eyes followed Catalina across every room. And what had it earned her? A front-row seat to her own humiliation.
Enough.
She was done being the understanding wife. Done shrinking into the shadows while he played knight in shining armor for another woman. Done crying over a man who had never once looked at her like she mattered.
If Emery Kirkland wanted Catalina Witt so badly, he could have her. But Francesca would not waste one more tear on a man who didn't know how to value what he already had.
Two blinding headlights suddenly swept across the circular driveway.
The Maybach tires crunched against the gravel, the bright beams slicing through the darkness and hitting the fountain.
The sudden light startled the two figures by the water.
Emery's hand snapped back to his side instantly. His spine stiffened, and in a fraction of a second, the tender man vanished. He was once again the cold, unapproachable head of the Kirkland conglomerate.
Catalina pulled the oversized men's jacket tighter around her chest. She turned her head, looking directly toward the shadows of the porch.
Even through the distance and the darkness, Francesca saw it.
Catalina's lips curved upward. It wasn't the fragile smile from a moment ago. It was a sharp, fleeting smirk of absolute victory. A silent, mocking challenge directed right at the wife standing in the cold.
Francesca didn't flinch. She didn't retreat. She stepped forward, out of the shadows, letting the headlights catch the sharp angles of her face. She met Catalina's smirk with a slow, cold smile of her own-the kind that didn't reach the eyes, the kind that promised this was far from over.
Catalina's smirk flickered. Something shifted in her gaze-a flicker of uncertainty, quickly masked. Then she turned away, pulling the jacket tighter, retreating toward the fountain like the coward she was.
Francesca watched her go. Enjoy your borrowed jacket, she thought. Enjoy my husband's attention while it lasts. Because I'm done fighting for it.
The driver stepped out of the Maybach and quickly opened the rear door.
Francesca didn't look back at the fountain. She didn't need to.
She bent down and slid into the leather backseat with deliberate grace, her spine straight, her chin held high.
The heavy car door slammed shut, cutting off the wind.
As the vehicle glided out of the massive iron gates of the estate, Francesca leaned her head against the headrest. Her phone vibrated violently against her thigh.
She picked it up with a trembling hand. It was a special push notification from a Boston high-society gossip column.
The bold headline screamed across the screen: Kirkland Family's Second Son, Hudson, to Announce Engagement to Socialite Catalina Witt.
Francesca stared at those black letters until they blurred.
Last night's shattered glass. Today's agonizing restraint in the cold. She stared at the screen, her mind automatically piecing the fragments together like a complex equation. Last night, Emery had shattered a crystal whiskey glass against the fireplace in a sudden, unexplained fit of rage. Today, he was standing in the freezing wind, looking at Catalina with a heartbreaking amount of restraint. The logic loop closed with brutal simplicity.
Emery was losing his mind because the woman he truly loved was about to marry his own brother.
And Francesca? She was just the convenient, pathetic placeholder he used to vent his frustrations.
Francesca closed her eyes. But this time, no tears came. The well had run dry. In their place was something cold. Something sharp. Something that felt a lot like freedom.
She was done. Done hoping. Done waiting. Done loving a man who would never love her back.
And when she walked away-and she would walk away-Emery Kirkland would finally understand exactly what he had thrown away.