“She Can’t Afford This Seat,” He Laughed—Until the Billionaire Said, “She’s With Me”
The first thing Nora Bellamy noticed at Newark Liberty International Airport was not the crowd, or the roar of departure announcements, or the rain streaking across the glass walls like someone had dragged gray fingers down the city. It was the sound of a woman laughing at her. Sharp, polished, cruel laughter, the kind that did not burst out naturally but was released on purpose, aimed like a blade. Nora stopped at the entrance to the first-class boarding lane, one hand pressed under the curve of her heavy belly, the other gripping the handle of a small navy suitcase that contained nearly everything she had left in the world. Her boarding pass trembled between her fingers. Los Angeles. One flight. One interview. One last chance to prove she was not the ruined, abandoned woman her ex-husband had tried to turn her into.
Then she saw him.
Mason Kline sat in seat 3D, already settled beneath the soft cabin lights as if the plane belonged to him. His navy suit was perfect. His brown hair was perfectly styled. His smile was the same one he used in court, in boardrooms, and in photographs where he pretended to be a man of character. Beside him lounged Brooke Ellis, the woman who had taken Nora’s office, Nora’s reputation, and finally Nora’s marriage, all while acting as if stealing another woman’s life was simply a promotion she deserved. Brooke tilted her champagne flute toward Nora’s stomach and said loudly enough for half the cabin to hear, “Well, look at that. Welfare must be giving out first-class upgrades now.”
Mason’s mouth curled. “Careful, Brooke. She might claim emotional distress. That was always Nora’s favorite business strategy.”
Nora felt the words hit her harder than any shove could have. Her babies shifted inside her, three tiny movements against her ribs, as if they understood before she did that the air had become dangerous. For a moment, she was back in the Manhattan apartment where Mason had stared at the ultrasound picture and said, “Triplets? You expect me to throw away my future for three accidents?” She remembered the joint account emptied two days later. She remembered HR escorting her out after Brooke’s anonymous accusation that Nora had leaked confidential files. She remembered standing on the sidewalk with a cardboard box against her chest while rain soaked through her coat and her phone lit up with Mason’s text: Don’t make this uglier than it has to be.
But this was not Manhattan. This was not their apartment. This was not a hallway where nobody would defend her. Nora lifted her chin, though her legs felt weak. “I’m not here for you, Mason.”
“No,” Mason said, leaning back with a lazy cruelty that told her he had waited months to see her small. “You’re here because some desperate company in California probably hasn’t Googled you yet.”
Brooke gave a soft, delighted gasp. “Oh, imagine when they do.”
The boarding line slowed behind Nora. Passengers looked up from phones. A flight attendant glanced over, uncertain whether the exchange was personal enough to ignore or public enough to stop. Nora’s face burned, not only from humiliation, but from the effort it took not to cry. She could not afford tears. Not with three babies depending on her body to stay calm. Not when this flight to Los Angeles was supposed to carry her toward a quiet consulting interview arranged through a recruiter who believed in second chances. If she landed the job, she would have health insurance again. She would have paid maternity leave. She would have a way to rent something bigger than the Queens studio where the radiator coughed all night and the ceiling leaked whenever the upstairs neighbor showered.
Then a man stepped into the aisle behind her, and the cabin changed.
He was tall, dressed in a charcoal overcoat over a dark suit that looked expensive without trying to announce itself. He carried no arrogance in his posture, yet people seemed to make room for him before realizing they had moved. His eyes landed on Nora, and the world narrowed. Recognition crossed his face slowly, then shock, then something softer and more dangerous than surprise.
“Nora?” he said.
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Say “suggestion” – Part 2 will be updated below
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Part 2: Mason stopped smiling.
Part 2: Mason stopped smiling. Brooke blinked. Nora turned, and her breath caught so suddenly that her hand tightened around the suitcase handle. She knew that voice….
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