Her Ex Flaunted A Beauty Queen, Then The Crown Sponsor Walked In-habe

The first thing Julian Duval saw when I walked into that Manhattan charity gala was not my face.

It was my stomach.

Five months pregnant, wrapped in black velvet, with one hand resting over the life he had once convinced the world I could never carry.

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The second thing he saw was Gabriel Lancaster beside me.

Gabriel’s hand rested lightly at the small of my back, not possessive, not performative, just steady.

That was the difference between men like Gabriel and men like Julian.

Julian needed a room to notice what belonged to him.

Gabriel only needed me to know I was not walking in alone.

Three hundred people stood under chandeliers that made every diamond, champagne flute, and camera lens throw light back into the room.

The air smelled like white lilies and citrus polish.

There was that soft rush of expensive fabric, the low murmur of donors greeting one another, the click of photographers calling names they barely knew.

Then the doors opened for us.

The sound changed.

It was not silence at first.

It was confusion.

Reporters stopped mid-question.

A donor in a silver dress held her champagne glass halfway to her mouth.

The event photographer kept his finger on the shutter button, but forgot to press it.

Dalia Fontaine, Julian’s twenty-six-year-old beauty queen fiancée, had been smiling so hard for the cameras that her face looked painted into place.

Her left hand was lifted near her cheek so the ring could catch the light.

Julian stood beside her in a midnight-blue tuxedo, polished and pleased, wearing the expression of a man who believed the night had already been arranged around his importance.

Then Dalia saw Gabriel.

That was when the first crack appeared.

Not in her makeup.

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