He Thought Divorce Would Break Her—Then The Jet Touched Down-hihehu

The morning Gavin Sterling ended his marriage, he wore the watch Audrey had bought him.

That was the first thing she noticed.

Not his lawyer.

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Not the polished conference table.

Not the settlement folder placed in front of her like a bill she was expected to pay quietly.

The watch caught the light every time Gavin moved his wrist, a gold flash against his navy suit, and for one strange second Audrey remembered the night she gave it to him.

Sterling Logistics had just survived the hardest year of its existence.

Vendors had been threatening to cut him off.

A bank officer had used the word “default” so casually that Gavin stopped sleeping for almost a week.

Audrey had been the one at the kitchen table with her hair twisted up, a calculator open, a stack of invoices beside her coffee, and a legal pad covered in payment plans.

She had been the one who turned chaos into something a lender could read.

She had been the one who called angry vendors before breakfast, softened them up, promised dates she knew she could make work, and then stayed up late building the numbers that made those promises true.

Gavin wore the watch now like it belonged only to him.

The conference room at Blackwood & Price smelled like cold coffee, lemon furniture polish, and wool coats damp from morning rain.

The heat clicked softly through the vents, but Audrey’s hands were cold in her lap.

Her wedding ring was turned inward against her palm because she did not want to see it shine.

Across from her, Gavin sat like a man already giving interviews about his victory.

He had dressed with care.

Navy suit.

White shirt.

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