Hadley Spencer sat cross-legged on the window seat of her bedroom, her sketchbook balanced on her knees. Outside, the Manhattan skyline glittered against the November dusk, a million lights winking like promises no one intended to keep. She was working on a concept for a mixed-use space-residential units flowing into public gardens, the boundaries dissolving like watercolor. Her fingers knew this work better than she knew herself. Three years of marriage had taught her to steal these moments, to hide her pencils and her passion in the drawer beneath her silk blouses.
Blair didn't know about the sketchbook. Or rather, he knew and didn't care. "A hobby," he'd called it once, not unkindly, the way one might dismiss a child's collection of rocks. "Hadley, you don't need to work. You have me."
She'd smiled then. She'd smiled for three years.
The intercom buzzed. She ignored it, adding shading to a cantilevered balcony. The housekeeper, Mrs. Chen, would handle whatever delivery or visitor required attention. Hadley had learned to make herself small in this apartment, to occupy the spaces Blair didn't want. The bedroom. The window seat. The corner of the kitchen where she made her morning coffee before he woke.
But the intercom buzzed again, longer this time. Then Mrs. Chen's voice, hesitant, through the speaker: "Mrs. Gregory? Mr. Gregory is home. He asked that you come down."
Hadley's pencil stopped. She looked at the clock-6:47. Blair never came home this early. The markets closed at four, but he stayed at Gregory Capital until eight, nine, sometimes midnight. "The money doesn't sleep," he'd told her once, as if this explained everything. As if she were asking why he didn't sleep, why they didn't sleep, in the same bed, in the same room, in the same life.
She closed the sketchbook. Her fingers traced the worn leather cover, a graduation gift from her mother, dead now three years. The timing felt significant in a way she couldn't name.
The stairs were marble, cold beneath her bare feet. She hadn't put on shoes. She hadn't expected to need them. The apartment spread below her like a museum she wasn't allowed to touch-the Baccarat chandelier, the Rothko that cost more than her father's house, the white sofa that no one sat on. Blair's taste ran to things that looked expensive and felt empty.
She saw them from the landing.
Blair sat on the white sofa. Not on it, exactly-sprawled, one arm extended along the back, his legs crossed at the ankle. He wore his charcoal Tom Ford suit, the one that cost six thousand dollars and made him look like exactly what he was: a man who had never been told no. And beside him, tucked into the curve of his arm like she belonged there, was a woman Hadley recognized immediately.
Keely Logan.
The name hit her stomach like a physical blow. She'd seen the photographs, of course. The ones Blair kept in his desk drawer, the ones she wasn't supposed to know about. Keely at twenty-two, graduating from RISD. Keely at twenty-four, winning some design award. Keely at twenty-six, leaving for Paris and breaking Blair's heart in the process.
Hadley had studied those photographs. She'd noted the way Keely wore her hair-loose, effortless waves. The way she dressed-vintage denim, oversized sweaters, clothes that said she didn't need to try. Hadley had once tried to cut her own hair to match, a disastrous attempt that ended in tears and an expensive trip to a salon for repairs. She had then emptied her closet of the bright colors she loved, replacing them with Keely's neutrals, Keely's textures, Keely's effortless cool.
Three years of being a placeholder. Three years of being not quite right, not quite her, not quite enough.
And now here was the original, in the flesh, wearing a Chanel suit that probably cost more than Hadley's entire wardrobe. The jacket was powder blue, the skirt short and sharp. On her throat hung a necklace-a delicate gold chain with a single pearl drop. Hadley knew that necklace. She'd found it in Blair's study last month, tucked in a velvet box with a card that read "Happy Anniversary." She'd thought, stupidly, that he was finally seeing her. Finally trying.
She'd never worn it. It hadn't felt like hers.
"Hadley." Blair's voice cut through her paralysis. "Come down. We have something to discuss."
She descended the remaining stairs. Her hand found the railing, the cool brass grounding her in her body when everything else felt like it was happening underwater. Keely watched her with eyes the color of amber whiskey, amused and assessing. She didn't move from Blair's side. If anything, she pressed closer, her hand resting on his thigh in a gesture of casual possession.
"Blair," Hadley said. Her voice sounded strange to her own ears, too high, too thin. "What's going on?"
Blair reached into his breast pocket and withdrew a folded document. He didn't stand. He didn't look at her directly, his gaze fixed on some point between her shoulder and the wall. "This is a divorce agreement," he said. "I've had my attorneys prepare it. It's generous, considering the circumstances."
He placed the document on the glass coffee table. The sound was soft, almost gentle, like a leaf falling.
Hadley didn't move. She couldn't. Her feet had rooted to the floor, her body refusing to process what her mind already understood. "Divorce," she repeated.
"Don't make this difficult, Hadley." Blair finally looked at her. His eyes were gray, the color of winter mornings, and just as warm. "I thought you were a smart woman. Don't prove me wrong."
Keely laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "Oh, Blair, be nice." She touched the pearl at her throat, drawing Hadley's eye to it. "Hadley, darling. Thank you. Truly. These past three years, you've been so helpful. Taking care of Blair, keeping his home, wearing my clothes." Her smile widened, showing teeth. "But I'm back now. And you can go."
The words landed like slaps. Hadley felt her face burn, her hands clench at her sides. She wanted to scream, to cry, to grab the Baccarat chandelier and swing it through this perfect, terrible room. But something in her had gone quiet. A stillness she didn't recognize, spreading from her chest outward.
She walked to the coffee table. Her legs moved without her permission, carrying her across the marble floor, past the Rothko, past the white sofa where her husband sat with another woman. The document waited for her, crisp white pages filled with dense legal text.
She picked it up.
The terms were exactly what Blair had promised: generous in their cruelty. She would retain no property from the marriage. No stake in Gregory Capital, which she had watched him build from a boutique firm to a Wall Street powerhouse. No alimony, no settlement, no claim to the life she had built inside these walls. She would leave with what she had brought: her clothes, her jewelry, her personal effects.
And her name. She noticed that, in the final clause. She would resume her maiden name, Spencer. Hadley Gregory would cease to exist, erased as thoroughly as if the marriage had never happened.
She thought of three years ago. The private ceremony at Blair's family's estate in Connecticut. The way he'd looked at her-not with love, she saw now, but with satisfaction. With the pleasure of acquiring something useful. She had signed the prenuptial agreement his attorneys had prepared, signing away her rights to everything before she even had it. "It's just a formality," he'd said, kissing her forehead. "We don't need paperwork to tell us what we mean to each other."
She had believed him. She had believed that love could fill the spaces where respect should have been, that devotion could substitute for partnership, that if she just tried hard enough, became quiet enough, became enough like Keely, he would eventually see her.
The pen was on the table. A Montblanc, heavy and cold. She picked it up.
"Hadley." Blair's voice carried a note of surprise. "You don't want to read it more carefully? Consult an attorney?"
"No." She found the signature line. Her hand was steady. "I don't need an attorney to tell me what this means."
The pen moved across the paper. Hadley Spencer. The letters looked strange, foreign, like someone else's name. She wrote them anyway, finishing with a flourish that belonged to the girl she had been before this apartment, before this marriage, before she learned to make herself small.
She set the pen down. The click echoed in the silence.
"I'm finished," she said.
Blair stared at her. For a moment, something flickered in his gray eyes-confusion, perhaps, or the first distant warning that he had miscalculated. But Keely was already standing, already moving toward the bar, already pouring champagne to celebrate her victory.
Hadley turned toward the stairs.
"Hadley." Blair's voice followed her. "You can take the car. I'll have Mrs. Chen pack your things."
She stopped at the landing. Looked back at him, at them, at this life she had tried so hard to build. The chandelier glittered overhead. The Rothko bled color against the white walls. And on the white sofa, her husband sat with his first love, already forgetting she had ever existed.
"Blair Gregory," she said. Her voice was clear, carrying to every corner of the room. "I hope you and the person you love never have to feel what I'm feeling right now."
She didn't wait for his response. She climbed the stairs to the bedroom she had shared with a ghost, to the window seat where her sketchbook waited. She changed into jeans and a sweater-her own clothes, not Keely's castoffs. She found her passport in the safe, her phone on the charger, her mother's leather sketchbook tucked beneath the pillows where she hid it from the housekeeper.
She didn't take the jewelry. She didn't take the designer bags or the fur coat Blair had given her for their first anniversary. She walked down the stairs with nothing but what she could carry in two hands, past the living room where champagne corks popped, past Mrs. Chen's averted eyes, past the door that had locked her inside for three years.
The November wind hit her like a wall. She hadn't brought a coat. She stood on Park Avenue, watching taxis stream past, watching people stream past, watching her own breath cloud and vanish in the cold air.
She was free.
She was nothing.
She walked.