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Verity Langford stood near the center of the gallery, smoothing down the front of her black silk dress for what felt like the hundredth time. Soft lighting illuminated her paintings on the white walls of West 24th Street in Chelsea. This was her first exhibition in two years, and the turnout had been better than she expected. People moved slowly between canvases, murmuring about brushwork and emotion. A few collectors had already spoken to her about commissions.
She should have felt proud. Instead, her stomach stayed tight with nervous hope. Tonight mattered a lot to her. Not just for her career, but for her marriage. She had spent weeks preparing, choosing which pieces to show, agonizing over every detail. Kingsley Langford, her husband, had promised he would come. He had even sounded excited when she reminded him last night. “Wouldn’t miss it, babe,” he had said, kissing her cheek before leaving for another late meeting. For once, she had let herself believe him. She checked her phone again. No messages. No missed calls. The screen glowed 9:47 p.m. Verity forced a polite smile as another guest complimented her use of shadow and light. She thanked the woman warmly, but the moment the stranger moved on, her shoulders dropped. The gallery felt warmer now, almost too warm. She glanced toward the entrance every few minutes, half-expecting to see Kingsley’s tall frame and dark blond hair appear. Each time, only strangers walked through. Two years of marriage. Two years of trying hard. She had done everything she could think of to keep them connected. She planned quiet dinners, suggested weekend trips to the Hamptons, even tried initiating intimacy more often even when he seemed distant. Most nights he came home long after she had gone to bed. Their conversations had become polite exchanges about schedules and surface-level pleasantries. The arranged marriage that once felt like a fairy tale had quietly turned cold. But tonight was supposed to be different. Her art had always been the one thing that made her feel truly alive. If Kingsley saw how hard she had worked, if he stood beside her in front of these canvases, maybe it would remind him why they had gotten married in the first place. The minutes stretched into hours. By ten-thirty, the crowd had thinned significantly. Only a handful of serious collectors remained, speaking in low voices near the back. Verity’s feet ached in her heels. Her smile had grown brittle. At eleven-fifteen, the gallery curator gently touched her arm. “We’re closing up soon, Verity. You must be exhausted. This was a huge success.” Verity nodded, swallowing the lump in her throat. “Thank you. It was… nice.” She waited until the last guests left before she allowed herself to breathe properly. The large open space felt suddenly too quiet. Her paintings stared back at her—intimate portraits of women caught between strength and longing. She had poured so much of herself into them. Kingsley hadn’t come. Verity walked slowly through the gallery one last time, her footsteps echoing softly. The excitement she had carried all evening had drained away, leaving behind a heavy, familiar ache. She had really believed tonight could be a turning point. That maybe, just maybe, he would see her again. She needed air. Needed a moment to collect herself before going back to their empty penthouse at Central Park West. A side hallway caught her eye. She had noticed it earlier but assumed it led to storage or offices. Needing to move, she pushed through the door and stepped into a quieter corridor lined with darker, more provocative art. The lighting here was lower, moodier. She told herself she would only walk a few steps before turning back. At the end of the hallway stood another door, slightly ajar. Light and low music spilled through the gap. Curious despite her exhaustion, Verity pushed it open and stepped inside. She froze. The space beyond was nothing like the public gallery. Rich velvet drapes covered the walls. Elegant masked guests moved through dimly lit areas. Some stood talking in small groups. Others disappeared through arched doorways. The air felt thicker, charged with something she couldn’t name. She should have left immediately. Instead, she kept walking, drawn deeper by a mix of curiosity and numbness. No one questioned her lack of a mask. A server offered her champagne as if she belonged there. Verity’s heart beat faster as she moved past semi-transparent glass walls. Behind them, couples and small groups engaged in open, unashamed acts of pleasure. Moans and whispers drifted through the space. The freedom, the raw intensity — it stirred something deep inside her that her marriage had never touched. She kept going, almost in a trance, until she reached the most private section. Through a large, partially open glass partition, she saw someone she knew too well. Quentin Langford. Her brother-in-law stood in the center of a private room, tall and commanding at forty-two. A masked woman knelt before him, her hands resting on his thighs. Quentin’s fingers were tangled in her hair as he guided her movements with calm authority. His gray-blue eyes were dark with pleasure, his powerful body relaxed yet completely in control. The woman moaned around him, completely surrendered. Verity couldn’t look away. Heat flooded her body. A dangerous, unfamiliar ache settled low in her belly. Kingsley had never looked at her with that kind of commanding hunger. No one had. The sight of Quentin — the man she had always disliked — dominating the moment so completely awakened something wild and shameful inside her. Her breath came shallow. Her cheeks burned. She backed away quickly, heart hammering, and hurried back through the club. By the time she reached the main gallery again, her hands were shaking. She grabbed her coat and left the building without saying goodbye to the curator. The cool night air of Manhattan hit her face as she stepped onto the sidewalk. She hailed a cab, gave the driver the address for their Central Park West penthouse, and stared out the window the entire ride. Her phone buzzed just as the elevator doors opened into the empty apartment, with an unknown number. She opened the message with trembling fingers. A photo appeared first — Kingsley, her husband and Judith, her elder sister in bed together, naked and tangled. Then the text: “Your husband is in bed with this woman. Go and see for yourself.” Verity stood frozen in the dark penthouse, the glow of her phone the only light. The exhibition, the club, the image of Quentin, and now this. Everything she had tried so hard to hold together was breaking apart.Inside the Langford triplex penthouse, the atmosphere felt peaceful. The long dining table was set elegantly, the soft glow of candlelight reflecting off crystal glasses and polished silverware. Dinner was served nearly fifteen minutes ago. The herb-crusted filet mignon rested neatly on Quentin's plate, accompanied by garlic mashed potatoes, grilled asparagus, and a rich mushroom cream sauce. Exactly the way Quentin liked it. He noticed it immediately. He also noticed that Verity had prepared his favorite dark chocolate soufflé for dessert. None of it was accidental. He knew that as well. Yet he didn't mention it. Instead, they ate quietly, exchanging only the occasional sentence. "How was work?" Verity asked softly. "Busy." "You looked exhausted this morning." "I was." She nodded before taking another bite of her dinner. "The board meetings?" She asked. "They ended the way I wanted." A small smile touched her lips. "I suppose that's why you're the boss." "I suppose so."
The office door closed softly behind Kingsley. For several long seconds, Quentin remained exactly where he was, his eyes fixed on the polished wooden door. Silence settled over the executive office. Only moments ago, his younger brother had walked in believing he could reclaim the woman he had once called his wife. Moments later, he had walked out carrying a truth he had never imagined. Quentin loved Verity, and not because of any contract or private arrangements. He simply loved her. And the realization shattered whatever hope Kingsley had walked into the office with. Quentin released a slow breath before turning back toward his desk. His attention immediately fell on the silver photo frame resting beside his laptop. It wasn't a formal wedding photograph. It was much simpler than that. Verity stood on the balcony of the New York triplex one quiet morning, wearing one of his white shirts while staring at the city below. She hadn't known he had taken the picture. Her hair was da
The executive floor of Langford Global Headquarters had been very busy and barely slowed down despite the morning slipping into early afternoon. The honeymoon had ended sooner than Quentin intended, but business never waited for anyone. Especially not for him. By eleven o'clock, he had already concluded two board meetings, approved three international acquisitions, rejected a merger proposal worth hundreds of millions, and signed enough documents to fill an entire cabinet. Now he sat alone inside his corner office on the top floor, Manhattan stretching beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows behind him. His suit jacket rested neatly over the back of his chair. His sleeves were rolled to his forearms. A stack of contracts sat open before him while another waited patiently beside his laptop. Yet every few minutes, his attention drifted toward his phone. Always thinking of receiving a call from Verity. He had also planned to call her after finishing the last report. He wondered if she
They spent the next hour moving slowly through the space. Quentin did not rush her. He did not hover too closely either. He allowed her to stop wherever she wanted, to study brushwork, composition, texture, and emotion. Sometimes she asked questions, and to her surprise, he answered with depth. Not the shallow knowledge of a wealthy collector trying to sound cultured, but the understanding of a man who truly loved art. At one point, she stood in front of a large painting of a woman standing before a stormy sea. The brushstrokes were wild, almost violent, yet the woman’s posture was calm. Verity stared at it longer than the others. Quentin came to stand beside her. “You like this one.” “I do.” “Why?” She folded her arms gently. “Because she looks like she’s holding herself together while everything around her is falling apart.” Quentin said nothing for a moment. Then quietly, “That sounds familiar.” Verity’s chest tightened. She knew what he meant. But she chose not to answer.
Verity followed Quentin out of the bedroom, still trying to pretend she was not curious. It was annoying, really. A few minutes ago, she had been sure she wanted to return to New York. She was sure that remaining in Malibu would only make everything worse. Yet now, because Quentin had said he had a surprise for her, she found herself walking after him like a woman who had not just been hurt by his words. She hated that about him. He had a way of shifting the air around her without trying too hard. One moment she was angry, the next she was curious. One moment she wanted distance, the next she wanted to know what he was thinking. It made no sense, and the fact that it made no sense irritated her even more. Quentin glanced back at her as they descended the grand staircase of the Sapphire Coastline estate. “You’re frowning.” “I am not.” “You are.” “I’m thinking.” “You frown when you think.” Verity narrowed her eyes at his back. “Do you always have to notice everything?” “Yes.”
The sound of running water filled the spacious bathroom as Verity stood beneath the shower, her eyes closed as warm water cascaded down her body. She should have felt happy. Just an hour ago, she had been lying in Quentin's arms, sharing breakfast with him while the ocean stretched endlessly beyond the glass walls of their private Malibu estate. Everything should have been perfect. Instead, all she could hear was one sentence. “I have a girlfriend.” The words repeated themselves over and over until her chest felt tight. What was she even upset about? This marriage wasn't built on love. It was revenge. A contract. An arrangement. At least that was what she had been telling herself from the beginning. Then why did it hurt? Why did it feel as if someone had reached inside her chest and squeezed her heart? Verity turned off the water and wrapped herself in a robe. She stared at her reflection in the mirror. "You don't care," she told herself. The reflection looked unconvinced.
Verity ended the call with Monica slowly, her cheeks still warm from Quentin’s laugh. The room felt strangely different, not because of the headlines, or because of the marriage. But because Quentin Langford no longer felt like an untouchable billionaire standing somewhere above her world. For th
Verity woke slowly beneath impossibly soft sheets. And for a few quiet seconds, she didn’t move. The mattress beneath her was massive, warm, and far too luxurious to belong to any hotel suite she had ever stayed in. The scent surrounding her wasn’t hers either. It was masculine. Clean cedarwood, e
The moving van idled outside the grand entrance of Central Park West like a quiet declaration of war. Or better still, something close. Verity stood on the sidewalk in a simple white T-shirt and jeans, watching as the movers carefully carried her easels, canvases, and the few personal belongings sh
The lounge hummed with quiet sophistication around them. Soft jazz floated through the air while Verity and Monica settled deeper into their corner booth. The white wine in Verity’s glass caught the warm light as she took another sip, feeling strangely lighter than she had in months. Monica was st







