1
CORA
The elevator swoopsup to the sixty-second floor, and my stomach tightens with anticipation. I stroke Winnie’s bald head to calm my nerves and squeeze Pearl’s tiny hand.
“Ready to see Daddy?” I ask. Pearl smiles up at me.
She’s such a champ. It’s almost two hours past her bedtime, and both girls napped during the drive in from Connecticut. They’re still groggy, but perking up, excited to surprise Daddy. He’s been stuck in the city all week, and he sounded exhausted on the phone today. He said he couldn’t wait to be home, so I thought I’d bring home to him.
Schmidt and Tiller, my bodyguards, loom behind us, their faces reflected in the polished brass elevator doors, their disapproval masked except for the corners of their downturned mouths. They don’t like that I left the estate so late at night, especially with the children. They wanted to run this visit by Adrian’s security, but I told them they’d ruin the surprise. Adrian’s people tell him everything.
My bodyguards treat me like a child. I suppose I am young enough to be Schmidt’s child. I’m twenty-six, and he’s at least fifty. He’s the highest-ranking man on my security team, though, so when Tiller was stonewalling me aboutleaving so late, Schmidt called for the car and told Tiller, “She’s the boss.”
According to the prenup, that’s true. It’s one of the few things I remember. The contract was longer than a software terms of service and all small print. I skimmed most of it—or tried to and failed—but for some reason, the passage about my security detail stuck in my head. They report to me, and if Adrian and I get divorced, I keep them.
Not that we’re ever going to split up. I was nervous when we first got together, but after two kids in five years, we’re definitely family for life. We’re an odd couple for sure—he’s twelve years older than me, richer than God, and he never smiles—but wefit. He takes care of me, and the girls and I make a warm, loving home for him. He needs that in his life.
I don’t care how rich they are, he comes from awful people. His dad is this sleazy guy who squandered his inheritance and now basically leeches off the business that his sons built. Adrian’s grandfather had money, but I guess after his experience with his son, he kept his money to himself until he died. He didn’t seem to have much interest in his grandkids, from what I can tell.
His mom straight-up abandoned her kids. One day, she had enough of her husband’s cheating, and she bailed to go live on a commune in Switzerland or something. Of course, Adrian didn’t tell me the backstory. His brother Logan did. Logan is ex-military and runs the family’s security, but he’s the least scary Maddox brother, Adrian included.
I don’t need Adrian to be an open book or therapized, though. Lord knows, I’m not. I accept him for him, and he has us to love him now—Pearl, baby Winnie, and who knows, maybe soon, we’ll have another bun cooking in the oven.
Winnie kicks her feet in her carrier and grabs at my face. I kiss her fingertips when they graze my lips.
Adrian is going to be so happy to see us. These days, he can’t tolerate being away from us for too long. He’ll deal with it for a night here or there, but we travel with him if he needs to be away longer than that.
He sounded so blank on the phone last night, like he didn’t have an ounce of energy left after his day. He’s involved in a hostile takeover. He didn’t tell me about it, of course. He doesn’t worry me with business, but I overheard. I didn’t hear which party is the hostile one, but I bet it’s him.
Adrian intimidates everyone except his brothers, me included, but the feeling gives me delicious shivers down my spine. I don’t mind it.
Being married to Adrian is like owning a Doberman, except the Doberman owns everything and barks orders that people immediately obey, and he’s twice as smart as everyone else in the room. Growing up, I always thought it would feel so safe to have an attack dog who loved you and only you, and I was right.
“Mrs. Maddox, are you sure you don’t want to get the little ones settled first? We can take them to one of the corporate suites, and I’ll watch them,” Tiller says, breaking the silence.
“But they’re part of the surprise.” I flash him a smile over my shoulder so he knows that I appreciate the offer.
When I turn back to face the elevator doors, I catch Schmidt shooting him a strange look in the reflection, almost like a warning. I don’t have time to wonder about it because a bell dings, the doors slide open, and I step over the marble threshold into the apartment where Adrian sleeps when he has to stay in the city. Butterflies erupt in my stomach in anticipation. He’s going to be so surprised to see us.
About twenty feet away, my husband is sitting in the middle of a white leather sofa, manspreading. A woman isstraddling his lap, riding him. She’s naked except for nude slingback heels with red soles.
No. Not nude.Blush. I own those same shoes. They cost eight hundred and ninety-five dollars for one pair. I have them in black patent leather, too.
Schmidt mutters “shit” and grabs Pearl, tucking her face to his chest and twisting around so she can’t see. Tiller and I instinctively close ranks, blocking Pearl’s view of the apartment. I blink over at Tiller and a dumb thought wanders across my brain like a bumblebee—who’s going to hidemyeyes?
“Mrs. Maddox.” Tiller grabs my arm, urging me back into the elevator. I yank myself free and step forward instead.
In the community room at Villa Theresa, there was a laundry basket full of board games. There was a generic Jenga game called Tower Tumble with almost all of its pieces, enough to build a structure high enough to get wobbly. The older kids played all the time. We played all the games all the time. The facility’s budget didn’t stretch to cable TV.
I never had steady nerves, so I was always the one to knock it over. There was always a moment, when I pulled out a block a little too fast or my hand shook or the tower simply wouldn’t hold anymore, a split-second right before it collapsed, when everyone held their breath. As I step out of the elevator, the butterflies in my stomach flap with hopeless panic exactly like they did then.
I have made a terrible mistake.
I blink my eyes like that’ll wipe the scene away, but the woman is still there, working herself up and down on my husband’s cock. Her copper red hair flows down her back. She’s gorgeous. I know her. Her name is Delaney Pierson, and she works with Adrian. She’s important. The Director ofFinance. She has her own office on corporate row and her own secretary.
She always shakes my hand too tightly and smiles like we’re both in on a secret. I always figured the secret was that I don’t belong, but I guess it’s that she’s fucking my husband.
Adrian is wearing a tux. His arms are stretched out along the back of the sofa. His phone is in his hand, his gold wedding band on his finger.