Billionaire Ex Mocked Me on a Flight—Then Three Boys Called Me Mum-heuh

Five years after my divorce, I thought I had become good at surviving the sight of Blake Harrington in magazines, interviews, charity photographs, and business headlines.

I was wrong.

Nothing prepares you for seeing the man who broke your heart walking down the aisle of your flight as though the past has booked the seat beside you.

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I had boarded early because I hated fuss.

First-class cabins were meant to feel calm, all soft voices, folded blankets, careful smiles, and the faint smell of coffee drifting from the galley.

I had chosen the window seat because I wanted to disappear into my book until we landed.

For ten minutes, I almost managed it.

Then Blake stepped on board.

He looked older, but not diminished.

Men like Blake did not simply age.

They collected sharper edges.

His dark suit fitted him like a warning.

His coat was still damp at the collar, and the silver watch at his wrist caught the cabin light when he reached up to stow his bag.

I recognised his hands before I allowed myself to recognise his face.

That was the absurd cruelty of old love.

You remembered details you had tried very hard to bury.

The way he adjusted his cuff when he was irritated.

The slight lift of his brow when he knew people were watching.

The pause before he spoke, as if the room should prepare itself.

His gaze swept the cabin, stopped on me, and hardened.

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