He Sat Beside His Ex-Wife To Humiliate Her — Then Three Children Called Her Mum-Teptep

Blake Harrington chose that seat with the kind of confidence that only comes from believing the world will always make room for you.

He saw Emma Winters before the cabin had even settled, before the flight attendants had finished their polite, automatic smiles, before the man in the aisle seat could pretend not to notice the tension walking down the plane. She was by the window, calm and neat and impossible to read, with a paperback open in her lap and one hand curled around a glass of water. Five years had passed since the divorce, five years since she had left his penthouse, his public life, and the version of himself that once thought love and control were the same thing.

Blake stopped for half a second and hated that he still noticed everything about her.

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The soft brown hair brushing the collar of her cream blouse. The stillness in her shoulders. The way she did not look up straight away, as though she could feel him coming and was deciding whether he deserved a reaction.

Then she lifted her eyes.

There it was.

Recognition first, then disappointment, then a hard wall dropping into place so quickly that anyone watching would have missed it if they were not looking closely. Blake smiled anyway, because a smile was easier than admitting how much he wanted to strike first.

‘You’re kidding me,’ he said, loud enough for a few passengers to turn.

Emma closed her book slowly. ‘Believe me, Blake. If I’d known you were on this flight, I would have walked all the way to Chicago.’

A few people pretended to study their phones. Others watched out of the corners of their eyes the way strangers always do when they sense a disaster arriving in a public place. Blake handed his briefcase to the overhead bin with deliberate care, then sat down in the seat beside her as if the entire aircraft had not just noticed what he was doing.

She looked at him once, then at the empty seats scattered across the cabin.

‘There are six other seats,’ she said.

‘I know.’

‘Are you really going to do this?’

‘I already have.’

The old muscle in her jaw tightened, the same one he remembered from years ago when she was forcing herself not to say something that would cut too deep. Back then, it had irritated him. Now it made him feel powerful in a way that was almost ugly.

‘Or maybe,’ she said, looking back to the window, ‘you still mistake cruelty for power.’

Blake gave a short laugh that had no warmth in it at all. ‘And maybe you still mistake secrets for innocence.’

That line landed exactly where he wanted it to, because it was not random. It was history. It was the wound beneath the scar.

Five years earlier, he and Emma had been the sort of couple magazines adored because they looked like a future people wanted to believe in. Harrington Global was moving from promising start-up to national powerhouse, and Blake was the face of it: ambitious, polished, relentless, a founder with perfect tailoring and a talent for making every room seem like it existed to validate him.

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