e Agreement. Her mind refused to process them. It felt like trying to read
mbness that started in her fingertips and spread inward, chilling her to the bone. The world she had so ca
were discussing a corporate merger. "This
isoner," she heard herself say, the words a quiet w
up at him, to really look at him. "Th
chosen together, the books lining the shelves, the life the
of something-guilt? regret?-crossed his face bef
plicity. It was a clean, sharp blade
. But her pride, a deep, unyielding thing she hadn't realized she possesse
built for herself. Deleting her social media. Avoiding photographers. Maintaining the quiet
ste in her mouth. All for a marriage he wa
she reached for the sterling silver pen on hisscanning for the signature line without reading a sing
e had likely expected tears, arguments, pleading. He had prepa
her voice clear and even. It was a final, dignified declaration of her
eptance seemed to unnerve him mo
swirls of Aria Vanderbilt felt foreign, like
of guilt that crossed his face was darker this time. He cleared his throat
ld, watching the ocean from the porch. Another broken promise, n
e her. She slowly capped the pen and pushed th
mrod straight. "Then, this penthouse
. He had expected her to crumble, to accept the consolation

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