“I’m still your fiancé, and this is how you talk to me? Clearly, three years wasn’t enough time for you to learn your lesson. If you keep this up, I will call off the engagement.”
I glanced at him, blank and bored.
What made him think that after three years, I’d still feel anything for him?
I was ten years old when I became an orphan.
Hubert Hamilton, Lex’s grandfather, had brought me into their mansion, announcing my engagement to Lex like it was already written in stone. I was just a kid, but I believed it.
Under Hubert’s kindness, I let myself fall for Lex, piece by piece.
Back in those tender days, Lex told me he loved me. He promised that once I was old enough, we’d get married. I believed him.
But then Ivana showed up.
I watched as everything that was mine slipped through my fingers—his love, his attention, all of it handed to her without question. He spoiled her like she hung the moon, and I couldn’t stand it.
I cried. I lashed out. I picked fights with Ivana just to feel like I still mattered.
All it got me was blame. Anger.
Then one day, Ivana’s necklace went missing.
Lex came straight to me, accusing me like it was the easiest thing in the world.
Sure, I hated Ivana, but I wasn’t shameless enough to steal from her.
Besides, my cat—the one Lex gave me for my birthday—was sick, hanging on by a thread. I’d been living in an apartment near the vet to take care of it. I hadn’t even set foot in the Hamilton mansion for weeks.
I looked Lex in the eye and fought back. Held my ground.
And then they “found” the necklace. Stuffed into a coat I hadn’t worn in ages.
Lex hit me.
Then he shattered the one thing my parents left me—a bracelet.
I’ll never forget the sound as it hit the floor, breaking into a dozen pieces. Something inside me broke, too. I snapped. I lunged at Lex like a crazy person.
In the chaos, Ivana fell down the stairs.
After that, Lex shipped me off to the countryside like I was nothing.
And my cat? It didn’t survive the summer.
Lex’s patience was running thin, his expression darkening. Just as he looked ready to snap, I raised my hand, the ring on my finger catching the sunlight.
“Sorry, Mr. Hamilton. I’m already married.”
His brows pulled so tight they practically met.
Ivana stepped forward, clinging to Lex’s arm. She shot me that patronizing look, the one you give a kid throwing a tantrum. “Audrey, you shouldn’t lie.
“Lex told me he froze all your bank cards, yet look at your clothes… You’re still young. Don’t let yourself get fooled by shady people.”
Her words hit their mark. Lex’s gaze dropped to my outfit—he really saw me then, like he’d just remembered cutting me off. His face went stony by the second.
To them, without the Hamilton money, I didn’t deserve to look this good.
Their friends were no better.
One of them snorted, full of smug disdain. “Audrey, don’t tell me you’re being a sugar baby now. Out here in the middle of nowhere? He’s probably some old geezer who couldn’t land a wife.”
Lex’s face twisted. Rage sparked behind his eyes as he turned on me. “Audrey Ave, do you have no shame?
“If you want to humiliate yourself, fine—but don’t you dare disgrace my family!”
From the look on his face, it was obvious—Lex genuinely thought I’d sunk low enough to become someone’s mistress.
Lex Hamilton, after all these years, really? Even if you hate me, shouldn’t you at least know me better than that? Do you honestly think I’m the type to sell myself for money?
I swept my gaze over the crowd, my voice icy. “I should be asking you if you have any shame. Did you all come out here just to put on some cheap circus act?
“I’m not like you useless people. I don’t rely on men, and I don’t need the Hamilton family to live a good life as well.”
Lex froze, clearly not expecting me to clap back. A second later, he let out a cold laugh. “You don’t rely on my family? You?
“Don’t kid yourself, Audrey. I know exactly what you’re up to—you’re just trying to get my attention.”
I blinked at him, then laughed—sharp, disbelieving.
Did he even hear himself?
Trying to get his attention?
Dream on.
Without thinking twice, I grabbed an egg from my grocery basket and hurled it at him.
Lex wasn’t ready for it. The egg smacked him square in the face, cracking open and dripping yolk down his cheek.
Ivana shrieked like she was the one hit. “Lex!”
Lex closed his eyes for a beat, wiping the egg off his face with a slow hand. When he looked up, his expression hardened, his hand shooting up toward me.
I stepped back, scoffing. “What? You gonna hit me again?”
His hand froze midair. He let out a sharp exhale, like he was forcing himself to stay calm. “Audrey, fine. You’re something else. If that’s how you want it, then stay here for the rest of your life.”
With that, he spun on his heel and stormed off.
The main act over, the gawkers scattered like obedient little ducks, trailing after him.
Ivana lingered, of course.
As she walked past me, she leaned in, her voice soft and sugary. “Audrey, thank you. If it weren’t for you, Lex would never have seen how good I am.”
I didn’t reply.
That guy you’re so proud of? He’s just trash I’ve already tossed out.
If you’re happy picking up garbage, then go right ahead.