“You’re not going to believe this,” Emily says, her voice tense with the kind of urgency that makes your stomach drop before your brain can even catch up.
“He’s engaged.”
I blink. “Who’s engaged?”
She exhales like it should be obvious. “Axton Rowe, Charlotte. Not Monty. God, no.”
I freeze in the tub.
The phone slips an inch from my wet hand and I stare at it like it just cursed me. Warm water clings to my skin. The bubbles have started to fade. My jaw is hanging open like I’m catching flies.
“Charlotte?” Emily’s voice crackles from the speaker. “You still there?”
“I—what do you mean, engaged?” I whisper, dragging the phone closer again like it’s some kind of bomb. “Engaged to who?”
“I don’t know the girl,” Emily says quickly. “But I overheard it at the gallery. We were planning for my debut show, and the curator was name-dropping all the VIP guests, and Axton came up. She said he’s attending with his fiancée. Like, his fiancée.”
The bubbles around me pop slowly, one by one. The water has gone cold, but I don’t move. I feel... hollow. Like the news physically knocked something out of me.
I stand up so fast water sloshes over the edge of the tub, splashing onto the tile with a wet slap. I wrap a towel around myself, barely gripping the phone as I pace. Wet footprints trail behind me across the bathroom floor.
“He’s engaged,” I repeat, like saying it again might change the meaning. “Engaged. As in currently betrothed? Not like a long-lost ex or a tabloid mix-up?”
“Sounds like it’s now,” Emily says. “That’s all I heard, okay? I figured you’d want to know.”
I don’t respond. I can’t. My head’s already spiraling into a hundred what-ifs and worst-case scenarios.
Engaged. He’s engaged.
To who? Some heiress? A B-list actress with a foreign last name? A model with legs for days and a Vogue contract?
“Homewrecking Nobody Seduces Real Estate Royalty,” I mutter, tugging the towel tighter around myself. “Jesus. I’m going to end up in a Buzzfeed listicle.”
“Charlotte—” Emily tries.
“Maybe it’s a rumor,” I say too loudly, cutting her off. “Maybe the curator was wrong. Maybe it’s an ex and she doesn’t know they broke up. Or maybe, they’re fake engaged! Celebrities do that. For publicity. Or image. Or taxes. Right?”
I swipe open my laptop with wet fingers, dragging the towel around me as I settle on the edge of the bed. My hair’s dripping onto the keyboard but I don’t care.
I type his name into the search bar like I’m summoning a ghost.
Axton Rowe.
The results flood in, articles, photos, a Forbes profile, a “Top Ten Most Eligible Bachelors” list from last year. My heart jumps when I spot a blurry paparazzi shot of him walking beside a tall brunette in sunglasses, but there’s no caption naming her.
Nothing confirming a fiancée.
No diamond-ring reveal. No red carpet announcement. No exclusive interview about how they met on a yacht or bonded over shared trauma and bespoke sushi.
Just whispers. Reddit threads. A DeuxMoi blind item that might be about him, or some other billionaire with good hair and commitment issues.
But somehow, the absence of proof makes it worse. It’s like waiting for a slap that hasn’t landed yet, flinching in anticipation.
By the time I crawl into bed, my towel has nearly opened and my hair’s tangled from pacing. I stare at the ceiling in the dark, every muscle tight.
Sleep never really comes.
I show up at the office Monday morning looking like someone who hasn’t slept, and also possibly fought a small battle on the way here.
Callie spots me from across the open floor and her eyes go wide. She’s already holding a paper cup in one hand, pink cardboard box in the other, and she rushes toward me in her strappy heels like I’m a wounded animal.
“Okay,” she says, eyes scanning my face. “I brought your usual and your emotional support donuts. What the hell happened?”
She thrusts the coffee into my hand before I can respond. I take a sip.
Too much almond milk. Barely any espresso. And a splash of vanilla syrup. Perfect, just the way I like it.
I lower my sunglasses halfway down my nose. The glare from the overhead lights feels like knives to my brain.
“Please don’t be loud,” I whisper. “I’m not emotionally stable enough for echoes.”
She stares at me. My eyes must be really puffy because her jaw tightens.
“Oh god. Did you cry over Monty?” she gasps, already reaching to grab my wrist like she needs to shake sense into me.
“Shhh!” I hiss, yanking my arm away and glancing around. “Do you want to get me fired?”
She rolls her eyes. “You’re not important enough to get fired for crying. Yet.”
Before I can tell her it wasn’t about Monty, at least not entirely, someone calls my name from the conference room.
Meeting. Right. I totally forgot I had a pitch review today. Of course.
Callie gives me a look that says we are not done here, and I drag myself into the room like a ghost of my better self. I slide into my seat, keep my shades on, and pretend I’m not one wrong sentence away from falling apart.
At some point, a new hire I don’t recognize, asks if I’m wearing sunglasses because I think I’m Anna Wintour or because I’m hungover.
“Yes,” I say without looking up.
Laughter. Great. I’m comedy now.
My phone buzzes on the table beside me and I sneak a glance. It’s our group chat.
Callie: “WHY IS NO ONE SAYING WHO HE’S ENGAGED TO I’M GOING TO SCREAM.”
Emily: “I told you I don’t know! The curator just said ‘his fiancée’ like she assumed everyone knows who she is. Rich people language, I guess.”
My head throbs. My phone buzzes again. And again.
It’s Monty.
Of course it is.
I silence it without unlocking the screen. My fingers are shaking.
I sit through the rest of the meeting mostly in a daze, nodding at the right moments, typing a sentence or two I’ll probably delete later. When it ends, I mumble something about a deadline and practically sprint to the elevator.
By the time I get home, I’m done pretending to be human.
The shoes come off first, kicked somewhere toward the coat rack. Then my hair tie goes flying as I yank down the twist I’d half-heartedly styled this morning. I peel off my jacket, unbutton my blouse, and collapse onto the couch without even turning on a light.
The room smells like lavender cleaner and old anxiety.
I reach for the closest bottle of alcohol, a random half-empty rosé I forgot I had, and take a long sip. No glass. No thoughts. At this point, I might as well drink my sorrows away.
My toes, still painted lilac from the salon trip I booked to feel better after the Monty mess, tap against the edge of the coffee table. One nail’s chipped. Fitting.
The bottle’s cold and sweating in my hand when my phone buzzes again.
A voice message.
Monty.
I stare at the notification for a full minute. I should delete it. I know I should. But instead, I press play.
His voice fills the quiet.
“Hey… um. I don’t really know why I’m doing this. I just,ugh. I’ve been thinking about you. About us. I miss our mornings together. Your laugh when you burned the toast. That stupid way you used to sing along to the Kehlani playlist. I didn’t know what I had. And maybe that’s on me, maybe I screwed it all up…”
He trails off for a second.
“I shouldn’t be saying this. But Charlotte I—”
I should’ve known. Honestly, I should’ve known.The universe always has this way of slapping me in the face right when I’m feeling too damn happy. Like today, when I was practically skipping through JFK with a carry-on stuffed full of overpriced Parisian lingerie and dreams of straddling my boyfriend the second I walked through the door.I haven’t seen Monty in a week, and I spent half that time pretending the Eiffel Tower was only half as thrilling as being in his arms. Pathetic, I know. But love makes you delusional. It makes you blind. And apparently, it also makes you stupid.Staring at myself in the elevator mirror as it climbs to our penthouse floor—my penthouse floor, technically. My blonde curls tousled just enough to look effortless (thanks to dry shampoo and airport humidity), red lipstick still intact despite the 8-hour flight, and under my basic brown coat? A sheer, baby pink lingerie set that screamed “rip this off with your teeth.”I look good. Dangerous. Like the heroin
The taxi is silent, except for the soft hum of the tires against the pavement. My face is still wet, mascara streaking down my cheeks like a dam just broke. I can't remember the last time I cried this much, if I’ve ever.I sniffle, wiping my face with the back of my hand, but it’s no use. I’m ugly crying, sobbing like I’m the main character in some tragic romance movie.Then I hear Callie’s voice, as always, the grounding force I need even when I’m falling apart. “You know, I told you not to trust someone named Monty,” she says, her voice surprisingly blunt.I laugh through the tears, a shaky, choked laugh that sounds more like a sob than anything remotely joyful. “You did,” I reply, voice breaking. “But I was stupid enough to ignore the warning signs.”Callie doesn’t try to sugarcoat things. She just keeps it real, even when it’s harsh. “Monty sounds like a walking red flag wrapped in a cheap suit,” she adds, leaning back in her seat, her arms crossed. “Honestly, I thought the guy wa
He stops in front of our table, hands in his pockets, head tilted slightly like he's trying to read me.He’s gorgeous. In that quiet, devastating kind of way. His jaw is sharp enough to write angry poetry about, dusted with the kind of stubble that makes you wonder what it’d feel like scraping down your inner thigh. His eyes are a cool, unreadable gray, like fog over cold water, but there's something warm in them too.He looks like the kind of man who ruins lives in novels and buys limited-edition watches for fun. Calm. Collected. Too composed to be anyone's rebound, and yet…All I can think is, Monty could never.Monty’s idea of “dressed up” was a button-down with pit stains and an ego that couldn’t fit through doorways. This guy? This guy looks like he owns a yacht he forgets about."Rough night?" he asks, voice smooth and deep, and oh my God. The accent. British. Like… actual British, not fake British like when Callie orders tea and says “cheerio” to the waiter.I blink up at him,
Chapter 4The elevator dings, and we step out into a hallway that screams luxury. Dark wood floors, minimalist black sconces casting moody shadows, and a single abstract painting that probably costs more than my Louboutins. He unlocks the door with a press of his thumb, of course it’s biometric, and I step inside like I’ve crossed into another realm.His penthouse is ridiculous. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlook the city skyline, glittering like a million secrets. The furniture is sleek and masculine: leather, steel, rich walnut. There’s a fireplace, not electric, a real one, and bookshelves that stretch so high they need a ladder. The air smells like cedar and bergamot and man.And I thought I had taste.“You live here?” I ask, stupidly, because obviously he does.He smirks like he knows exactly how impressive it is, but won’t say it. “Champagne?”I nod before my brain catches up with my mouth. He disappears into the kitchen, and when he comes back, he's holding a bottle that looks m
I wake up in a bed that is not mine.The bed beneath me is impossibly soft—like cloud-level soft—and the sheets smell like expensive detergent and man.The air smells like cologne, money, and a faint trace of regret.My lashes flutter open, and the ceiling above me is not the cracked one in my apartment with the water stain shaped like New Jersey (I have money for clothes, not for leaky roofs). This one is smooth, white, and lit by a sunbeam that really needs to dial it down.Then I turn my head.Oh.My.God.He’s lying there, half on his stomach, the covers kicked halfway off his very naked body, the morning sun slashing across his back and highlighting every line of his perfect, sculpted torso.And his face? Jesus. Even unconscious he looks like a cologne ad. Sharp jaw, dark lashes, slightly parted lips. I think there might be a little bit of drool on the pillow and somehow even that is attractive.And then it hits me.Oh my God. I slept with him.I, Charlotte Isabella Montgomery, h
Chapter 6“So... you’re telling me,” Emily says slowly, her fork frozen mid-air, “that you hooked up with Axton freaking Rowe?”I blink. “Who?”Callie actually chokes on her mimosa. “You don’t know who Axton Rowe is?”“No? Should I?”“How the hell did I not recognize him.” Callie mumbles to herself, wiping her chin. She brushes a loose curl of her brown hair away from her face. It’s a bit frizzy today from the Sunday heat, curling up in little tendrils around her shoulders, her fingers tangling with it in frustration.Emily leans back in her chair, her glossy black hair perfectly straight and shiny, just a little too perfect. She’s doesn’t have to spend hours trying to detangle her hair every morning like me. She looks me dead in the eye, unblinking.“Girl, he’s only the CEO of Rowe Global, the luxury real estate empire that literally owns half the Upper East Side. He’s richer than God and twice as pretty. And didn’t he date that actress? The one with the weird eyebrows?”“Oh my god,”
“You’re not going to believe this,” Emily says, her voice tense with the kind of urgency that makes your stomach drop before your brain can even catch up.“He’s engaged.”I blink. “Who’s engaged?”She exhales like it should be obvious. “Axton Rowe, Charlotte. Not Monty. God, no.”I freeze in the tub.The phone slips an inch from my wet hand and I stare at it like it just cursed me. Warm water clings to my skin. The bubbles have started to fade. My jaw is hanging open like I’m catching flies.“Charlotte?” Emily’s voice crackles from the speaker. “You still there?”“I—what do you mean, engaged?” I whisper, dragging the phone closer again like it’s some kind of bomb. “Engaged to who?”“I don’t know the girl,” Emily says quickly. “But I overheard it at the gallery. We were planning for my debut show, and the curator was name-dropping all the VIP guests, and Axton came up. She said he’s attending with his fiancée. Like, his fiancée.”The bubbles around me pop slowly, one by one. The water
Chapter 6“So... you’re telling me,” Emily says slowly, her fork frozen mid-air, “that you hooked up with Axton freaking Rowe?”I blink. “Who?”Callie actually chokes on her mimosa. “You don’t know who Axton Rowe is?”“No? Should I?”“How the hell did I not recognize him.” Callie mumbles to herself, wiping her chin. She brushes a loose curl of her brown hair away from her face. It’s a bit frizzy today from the Sunday heat, curling up in little tendrils around her shoulders, her fingers tangling with it in frustration.Emily leans back in her chair, her glossy black hair perfectly straight and shiny, just a little too perfect. She’s doesn’t have to spend hours trying to detangle her hair every morning like me. She looks me dead in the eye, unblinking.“Girl, he’s only the CEO of Rowe Global, the luxury real estate empire that literally owns half the Upper East Side. He’s richer than God and twice as pretty. And didn’t he date that actress? The one with the weird eyebrows?”“Oh my god,”
I wake up in a bed that is not mine.The bed beneath me is impossibly soft—like cloud-level soft—and the sheets smell like expensive detergent and man.The air smells like cologne, money, and a faint trace of regret.My lashes flutter open, and the ceiling above me is not the cracked one in my apartment with the water stain shaped like New Jersey (I have money for clothes, not for leaky roofs). This one is smooth, white, and lit by a sunbeam that really needs to dial it down.Then I turn my head.Oh.My.God.He’s lying there, half on his stomach, the covers kicked halfway off his very naked body, the morning sun slashing across his back and highlighting every line of his perfect, sculpted torso.And his face? Jesus. Even unconscious he looks like a cologne ad. Sharp jaw, dark lashes, slightly parted lips. I think there might be a little bit of drool on the pillow and somehow even that is attractive.And then it hits me.Oh my God. I slept with him.I, Charlotte Isabella Montgomery, h
Chapter 4The elevator dings, and we step out into a hallway that screams luxury. Dark wood floors, minimalist black sconces casting moody shadows, and a single abstract painting that probably costs more than my Louboutins. He unlocks the door with a press of his thumb, of course it’s biometric, and I step inside like I’ve crossed into another realm.His penthouse is ridiculous. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlook the city skyline, glittering like a million secrets. The furniture is sleek and masculine: leather, steel, rich walnut. There’s a fireplace, not electric, a real one, and bookshelves that stretch so high they need a ladder. The air smells like cedar and bergamot and man.And I thought I had taste.“You live here?” I ask, stupidly, because obviously he does.He smirks like he knows exactly how impressive it is, but won’t say it. “Champagne?”I nod before my brain catches up with my mouth. He disappears into the kitchen, and when he comes back, he's holding a bottle that looks m
He stops in front of our table, hands in his pockets, head tilted slightly like he's trying to read me.He’s gorgeous. In that quiet, devastating kind of way. His jaw is sharp enough to write angry poetry about, dusted with the kind of stubble that makes you wonder what it’d feel like scraping down your inner thigh. His eyes are a cool, unreadable gray, like fog over cold water, but there's something warm in them too.He looks like the kind of man who ruins lives in novels and buys limited-edition watches for fun. Calm. Collected. Too composed to be anyone's rebound, and yet…All I can think is, Monty could never.Monty’s idea of “dressed up” was a button-down with pit stains and an ego that couldn’t fit through doorways. This guy? This guy looks like he owns a yacht he forgets about."Rough night?" he asks, voice smooth and deep, and oh my God. The accent. British. Like… actual British, not fake British like when Callie orders tea and says “cheerio” to the waiter.I blink up at him,
The taxi is silent, except for the soft hum of the tires against the pavement. My face is still wet, mascara streaking down my cheeks like a dam just broke. I can't remember the last time I cried this much, if I’ve ever.I sniffle, wiping my face with the back of my hand, but it’s no use. I’m ugly crying, sobbing like I’m the main character in some tragic romance movie.Then I hear Callie’s voice, as always, the grounding force I need even when I’m falling apart. “You know, I told you not to trust someone named Monty,” she says, her voice surprisingly blunt.I laugh through the tears, a shaky, choked laugh that sounds more like a sob than anything remotely joyful. “You did,” I reply, voice breaking. “But I was stupid enough to ignore the warning signs.”Callie doesn’t try to sugarcoat things. She just keeps it real, even when it’s harsh. “Monty sounds like a walking red flag wrapped in a cheap suit,” she adds, leaning back in her seat, her arms crossed. “Honestly, I thought the guy wa
I should’ve known. Honestly, I should’ve known.The universe always has this way of slapping me in the face right when I’m feeling too damn happy. Like today, when I was practically skipping through JFK with a carry-on stuffed full of overpriced Parisian lingerie and dreams of straddling my boyfriend the second I walked through the door.I haven’t seen Monty in a week, and I spent half that time pretending the Eiffel Tower was only half as thrilling as being in his arms. Pathetic, I know. But love makes you delusional. It makes you blind. And apparently, it also makes you stupid.Staring at myself in the elevator mirror as it climbs to our penthouse floor—my penthouse floor, technically. My blonde curls tousled just enough to look effortless (thanks to dry shampoo and airport humidity), red lipstick still intact despite the 8-hour flight, and under my basic brown coat? A sheer, baby pink lingerie set that screamed “rip this off with your teeth.”I look good. Dangerous. Like the heroin