Three years after divorcing my billionaire ex-husband, I made the colossal mistake of sleeping with him. To erase the humiliation, I accepted a date with a gentle colleague, only for my ex-husband to ambush us at our daughter's preschool. He saw us together, his eyes turning as cold as steel. "I'm reconsidering our arrangement. I'm filing for sole custody." He dropped the words like stones, then ruthlessly ordered his lawyers to prepare the papers immediately. He knew Poppy was my entire world, the only reason I survived our suffocating marriage. I was terrified, but the nightmare was just beginning. That night, Poppy slipped out of my apartment and ended up at his penthouse with a dangerously high fever. When I frantically rushed over to treat her, the ruthless tycoon who always put his empire before me suddenly looked vulnerable. He handed me a bowl of hot soup, his voice losing its usual commanding edge. "Don't go, Chloe. Poppy needs you. And I need you." I stared at him in disbelief. Why now? Why use our sick child as a weapon to chain me back to a gilded cage he knew I almost died escaping from? As my daughter cried and clung to my neck, begging me not to leave, I looked at the powerful man standing in the doorway. I was trapped by their love, but this time, I wouldn't just surrender.
The sunlight sliced through the gap in the heavy curtains.
It hit Chloe Sullivan's face with brutal intensity. A sharp pain pulsed behind her eyes, a familiar hangover rhythm. She groaned, rolling over.
The sheets were wrong.
They were too smooth, too cool against her skin. A thread count her own budget could never justify. Egyptian cotton. The scent in the air was also wrong. Sandalwood and something else, a clean, expensive cologne that was once as familiar to her as her own breath.
Her heart stopped.
Then it hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage.
She forced her eyes open, dread coiling in her stomach like a cold snake. The room came into focus. Minimalist, gray and chrome, with a floor-to-ceiling window offering a panoramic view of Central Park that screamed money and power.
Julian's apartment.
Slowly, as if moving through water, she turned her head on the ridiculously soft pillow.
He was there.
Julian Carlisle IV lay on his back beside her, asleep. The silk sheet was pooled at his waist, revealing the sharp lines of his chest and shoulders. His dark hair was slightly messy, and his usually severe mouth was relaxed in sleep. His jawline was tense, even then. A defining signature.
Flashes of the night before assaulted her.
The low lights of the bar. The clink of ice in a whiskey glass. His hand, warm and firm, closing around her wrist. His voice, a low rumble in her ear, hot against her skin. The press of his body against hers.
A wave of nausea washed over her, and it had nothing to do with the alcohol. It was pure, undiluted self-loathing.
Three years.
Three years of building a life without him, of proving she could stand on her own. All of it undone by one weak moment and too much bourbon.
She had to get out. Now.
Carefully, she lifted the edge of the sheet. The movement was agonizingly slow. She slid her legs over the side of the bed, her feet searching for the cold, hard floor. A thief in the house she once called home.
Her toes had just brushed the polished wood when his voice cut through the silence.
"Where are you going, Chloe?"
It was low, raspy with sleep, but it held the same authority that commanded boardrooms and terrified competitors.
She froze, her back to him, every muscle in her body screaming. She couldn't look at him. She wouldn't.
The rustle of sheets told her he was sitting up. The weight shifted on the mattress.
"I asked you a question."
She squeezed her eyes shut, then forced herself to move. Her dress was a crumpled heap on the floor. She snatched it, her hands shaking as she tried to pull it on. It was a simple black sheath dress, something she'd worn a hundred times, but now it felt alien, a costume from a life that wasn't hers.
The zipper was in the back.
Her fingers fumbled, unable to grasp the small metal tab. She twisted, her shoulder aching in protest, but it was useless. A fresh wave of humiliation burned her cheeks. Trapped. By a zipper.
A warm presence was suddenly behind her. His scent enveloped her, stronger now, more potent.
"Need help?"
The question was calm, almost detached, which only made it worse.
"No, thank you, Mr. Carlisle."
The name felt like a weapon, a shield. A reminder of the chasm that now lay between them. She continued to struggle, her breath coming in short, angry puffs.
She felt his fingers brush against her back. An involuntary shiver traced its way down her spine. His touch was light, almost clinical, as he took the zipper tab between his thumb and forefinger.
With a smooth, effortless motion, he pulled it up. His knuckles grazed her skin, a trail of fire on her cold flesh.
"We've been divorced for three years," she said, her voice trembling. "Last night was a mistake."
He didn't answer immediately. He stepped back, and she heard him pick up a glass from the nightstand. The sound of him drinking, the slight movement of his throat. A familiar, intimate sound that made her stomach clench.
"Your dress is torn," he stated, his tone flat, devoid of emotion. "If you walk out of here looking like that, building security might think I've assaulted someone. Find something else to wear."
He nodded his head towards the massive walk-in closet. An entire wall of dark, polished wood. Her side of it had been empty for years.
"Is that what you think this was?" he asked, his voice a low challenge.
She finally turned to face him. He was standing by the bed, wearing only a pair of gray sweatpants that hung low on his hips. His eyes, the color of a stormy sky, were fixed on her.
She took a step towards the bedroom door, intent on escape. His hand shot out, grabbing her wrist. His grip was like steel.
"Let go of me, Julian." The words were a low growl.
He held her for a second longer, his gaze searching her face. Then, he released her abruptly, taking a step back. He crossed his arms over his chest, his expression unreadable, watching her as if she were a particularly volatile stock he was deciding whether to sell or hold.
Chloe didn't wait for him to change his mind. She turned and fled, pulling the bedroom door open and practically running into the vast, open-plan living area.
A woman in a crisp, gray uniform was arranging a platter of pastries on the marble island of the kitchen. Mrs. Davies. His housekeeper for a decade.
The older woman looked up and a warm, kind smile spread across her face. A smile that made Chloe's blood run cold.
"Good morning, Dr. Sullivan," Mrs. Davies said, her tone perfectly respectful. "The master asked me to prepare some breakfast. Please, help yourself."
Chloe stopped dead in her tracks. The scent of fresh coffee and baked blueberries filled the air. It wasn't an ambush. It was a perfectly executed checkmate.
She was trapped.
She glanced back towards the bedroom. Julian was leaning against the doorframe, a silent observer to her public humiliation. His gray eyes were deep, unreadable, and held not a single trace of victory. Just a quiet, unnerving watchfulness.
Fleeing From My Possessive Billionaire Ex
Winnie Suchoff
Romance
Chapter 1
22/06/2026
Chapter 2
22/06/2026
Chapter 3
22/06/2026
Chapter 4
22/06/2026
Chapter 5
22/06/2026
Chapter 6
22/06/2026
Chapter 7
22/06/2026
Chapter 8
22/06/2026
Chapter 9
22/06/2026
Chapter 10
22/06/2026