McNeil had never been this anxious before. He found himself checking his reflection in the full-length mirror over and over, fussing with his clothes, adjusting how he sat, smoothing out his expression until it looked gentle enough.
At three in the afternoon, a message popped up—a company contact request on his work app. The name didn’t belong to any business he recognized. Then a video call came through.
Suddenly, Victoria’s face filled his screen.
It had been more than three months since the divorce—more than three months without seeing each other. McNeil had thought he’d found his composure by now, but the moment he saw Victoria, all that calm evaporated.
“Where are you right now? I need to see you.”
Hers was the face he’d been yearning for day and night, yet now all he could do was stare at this digital version, separated by a cold pane of glass.
Victoria’s expression was unreadable, distant in a way that made her seem almost like a stranger. He felt a tremor of fear.
“If you have something to say, make it quick. I only have ten minutes.”
McNeil could see the floor-to-ceiling window behind her. Victoria looked noticeably fuller, her cheeks soft and glowing with health. She seemed utterly at peace, more radiant than ever, as if these past months had treated her well—too well.
The sharp, elegant lines of her face were blurring into something rounder, almost cherubic. But she was still breathtaking, so beautiful he couldn’t look away.
“I want to see you,” he repeated, the words tumbling out. He’d been trying to reach her for weeks, losing his mind, unable to focus on anything else.
Victoria remained perfectly calm. “We’re seeing each other now.”
She clearly had no intention of letting him back into her life. Even if she weren’t pregnant, she would have wanted nothing more to do with him. She’d told him as much the last time they spoke—that she wanted their paths to never cross again.
“I mean in person, not through a screen.”
Victoria’s lips curved in a faint, almost mocking smile. “I don’t see the point. We’re barely more than strangers now.”
Out of sight, McNeil’s hands balled into fists and then relaxed again.
“Gwyn misses you. You promised you’d spend time with her three times a week. You broke your promise.”
Victoria gave a soft, derisive laugh. “It doesn’t matter whether I’m there or not. Gwyn’s growing up—she needs a mother’s love, sure, but you can find someone else to give her that. It doesn’t have to be me.”
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