He Saw His Ex With Twin Babies, And His Perfect Wedding Cracked-Teptep

The wipers were the first thing Maxwell Harrington remembered afterward.

Not Genevieve’s voice.

Not the honking behind him.

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Not even Ruby Walsh’s face, though that was the thing that split his life in two.

It was the wipers, dragging across the windshield in stiff, rubbery strokes, trying and failing to keep November rain from turning the whole street into a smear of red lights and wet glass.

He had been coming home from a business dinner he had not wanted to attend.

Genevieve had worn cream and diamonds and spoken to every executive at the table as if she had already been born into the role of his wife.

Maybe she had.

Their families had been writing that ending since they were children.

The Harringtons and the family Genevieve came from shared boardrooms, charity dinners, summer houses, and a talent for making pressure sound like tradition.

By the time Maxwell was thirty-two, people no longer asked whether he wanted to marry Genevieve.

They asked how much longer until the wedding.

Three months.

That was the number circled in the wedding folder on the passenger-side console.

Three months until the church.

Three months until the photographs.

Three months until his mother could stand in front of half their world and prove her son had finally chosen the proper future.

Genevieve was talking about flowers.

She said the arrangements had to feel classic but not stiff, expensive but not vulgar, intimate but still appropriate for the guest list.

Maxwell nodded at the right moments.

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