Grover, ever the opportunist, cleared his throat, snapping me back to the present. He ushered in another man, a figure that immediately commanded attention. My mind, still reeling from the shock of Collin's final, brutal dismissal, struggled to process the new arrival. For a moment, my thoughts were a tangled mess, a broken reel replaying fragments of our five-year marriage, the trust I'd foolishly given, the blind faith I'd poured into a man who saw me as nothing more than a disposable asset.
The coldness on my face was not just from the tears, but from the frigid realization of his calculated cruelty.
"Mrs. Woods?" a low, resonant voice broke through my daze.
I blinked, raising my gaze. My eyes felt swollen, raw, but the tears had stopped. I looked up, directly into the intense, almost unnervingly perceptive eyes of Eli Salazar. He was older than Collin, perhaps late forties, with a rugged handsomeness that bespoke a life lived on his own terms. His dark hair was streaked with silver at the temples, and his jawline was sharp, defined. A faint scar cut through his left eyebrow, adding to his formidable aura. He wore a perfectly tailored charcoal suit that somehow looked both expensive and effortless.
He observed me with a curious, almost predatory stillness, his gaze lingering on my tear-streaked face. His lips, thin and firm, curved into a slight, unreadable smile. "Crying, are we?" he asked, his voice a low rumble, devoid of judgment or pity, merely an observation. "Collin forgot to mention the emotional distress clause in the contract."
I hastily wiped my cheeks with the back of my hand, the silk of my dress cool against my skin. The sudden vulnerability was infuriating. I pushed myself up from the plush sofa, my legs feeling strangely weak. His eyes followed my movement, a flicker of something unreadable in their depths.
As I stood, my gaze swept past Eli, catching sight of another man who had followed him in. My stomach lurched. Grover Dyer. Again. He stood a few steps behind Eli, a smirk playing on his lips, a look of smug satisfaction in his beady eyes. This was the man who had always facilitated Collin's dirtiest dealings, the one who procured "entertainment" for his business partners. The man who had once tried to pressure Collin into leveraging my connections for a shady land deal. Collin had publicly dismissed him then, calling him "a relic of a bygone era." Clearly, some relics were still in circulation.
"Well, well, if it isn't the lovely Elena Fuentes," Grover purred, his voice slimy. "Still as stunning as ever, even after... everything." His eyes raked over my body, making my skin crawl. "Collin always did have impeccable taste, even if he didn't appreciate the finer things when he had them." He chuckled, a wet, grating sound. "Though, I must say, Ms. Fuentes, I'm surprised you're the one here tonight. I thought Collin would at least send someone... less likely to cause a scene." He winked at Eli. "But then again, perhaps it' s part of your unique charm, isn' t it, Eli? Always drawn to the 'white moonlights' you can't have."
Eli, who had been listening to Grover with an air of detached amusement, slowly exhaled a plume of smoke from the cigar he held between his fingers. His eyes, dark and intense, settled back on me, piercing through my carefully constructed facade.
"So, the devoted wife," Eli drawled, ignoring Grover. His gaze flickered to my abdomen, then back to my face. "Still chasing after a man who sees you as nothing more than an accessory, a status symbol he can trade for a better model?" He paused, his eyes narrowing slightly. "And you even went under the knife for him, didn't you? To fix what he broke, or what he imagined was broken."
My breath hitched. The secret surgery. The desperate attempt to reclaim what he had deemed "lost." How could he know? The shame, the raw vulnerability, washed over me in a tidal wave. I felt completely exposed, stripped bare by his unnerving perception. He saw through my crimson dress, through my forced composure, right to the aching, desperate core of my being. I couldn't speak, could only nod, a tiny, involuntary movement that confirmed his damning insight. The sheer audacity of his observation, combined with the raw truth of it, left me speechless. He had seen my desperation, my humiliation, my deep-seated desire to be loved and wanted. And he hadn't flinched. He hadn't offered pity, only a brutal, unflinching mirror to my own brokenness.