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After His Fiancée Tried to Drown Me Novel Cover

After His Fiancée Tried to Drown Me

Surviving a murder attempt by a jealous fiancée, a woman’s world is upended when a billionaire enters her life. This brush with death forces her into a treacherous landscape of elite rivalries and secret schemes. As she pursues justice against those who tried to drown her, a surprising romance begins to develop. Now, she must learn to trust again while navigating high-stakes social conflicts that will ultimately redefine her entire future.
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Chapter 4

Seattle was gray when I arrived. Not the dramatic gray of a storm rolling in, but the quiet, settled gray of a city that had made its peace with overcast skies. I stood outside my new apartment building with one suitcase and a carry-on and looked up at the low clouds and thought: good. I didn't want sun. Sun felt like a demand.

The apartment was on the fourth floor. Small. Clean. The previous tenant had left a single nail in the living room wall, and the kitchen window looked out onto a fire escape and, beyond it, a slice of Elliott Bay. I set my suitcase down in the middle of the empty floor and stood there for a moment, listening to the silence.

Mine. All of it, mine.

I unpacked slowly over the first few days, the way you do when you're not in a hurry to make a place feel permanent. A mug on the counter. A book on the windowsill. The worn paperback I always kept in my bag, now given its own shelf. Small claims. Small roots.

The hospital was a twenty-minute walk from my building, which I discovered on my first morning when I left too early and arrived with time to spare. The ER was busy in the particular way of a Level I trauma center — controlled chaos, the kind that had its own logic once you learned to read it. My new colleagues were professional and cautious with me the way people are with someone they don't know yet. I was cautious back. That felt right.

I started running the waterfront before my shifts. I want to be clear: I am not a runner. I have never been a runner. But there was something about the cold air off the water, the way it hit the back of my throat and made everything feel sharp and immediate, that I needed in the mornings. The sound of the bay. The particular gray-green of the water. It didn't remind me of the Atlantic. It was its own thing entirely, and that mattered more than I expected.

I ran. I worked. I learned which coffee cart near the hospital had the shortest line. I found a grocery store that stayed open late. I texted Mia back when she checked in, kept the messages short and honest: I'm okay. Getting there. Seattle is cold.

I was rebuilding. It was slow and unglamorous and entirely necessary, and most days I could feel it working, the way you feel a bone knitting — not painless, but purposeful.

Three weeks in, I was charting at the ER nurses' station when the department doors swung open.

I heard him before I saw him. Not his voice — just the particular rhythm of someone who walks like they own whatever room they've just entered. I looked up.

Scott Cooper was standing in the middle of the ER with a transfer authorization form in one hand and a cup of black coffee in the other. He was wearing his white coat. He looked exactly the same as he had in the Long Island hospital — skeptical expression, coffee stain probably somewhere on the coat, the general air of a man who had somewhere to be and had decided this was it.

He found me across the room the way people find things they've already located before they started looking.

'Elliott,' he said.

I set down my pen.

He crossed the floor, handed the transfer form to the charge nurse without breaking eye contact with me, and took a sip of his coffee.

'You transferred,' I said.

'Seattle has better coffee than New York.'

I stared at him. 'That's not a reason to transfer hospitals.'

'It's a contributing factor.' He glanced around the department with the assessing look of someone cataloging a new workspace. 'The trauma volume here is also excellent.'

'Go back to New York, Scott.'

'The transfer is already processed.' He said it the way he said everything — matter-of-fact, unashamed, like he was reporting a patient's vitals. 'HR has the paperwork. I start Monday.'

I looked at him for a long moment. He looked back. He didn't fidget. He didn't soften the edges of what he'd just said or offer me an exit ramp. He just stood there with his coffee and waited, with the patience of someone who had already decided how this was going to go.

'This is insane,' I said.

'Probably,' he agreed, and went to find his new office.

* * *

He was systematic about it. That was the thing I hadn't anticipated — not the persistence, which I might have expected, but the method. Scott didn't make grand gestures. He made small, consistent ones, and he made them without asking permission.

Our shifts overlapped three days a week. On those days, he materialized at the end of my shift and fell into step beside me on the walk home, pointing out that our routes were essentially the same. They were not essentially the same. I had checked. He had clearly also checked, and had decided the four-block detour was irrelevant.

'You're going out of your way,' I told him the second time.

'I like the walk,' he said.

On a Tuesday night I came home to find him in the hallway outside my apartment, holding two takeout containers and looking entirely unbothered about it.

'I ordered too much,' he said.

'You always order too much.'

'It's a consistent problem.' He held out one of the containers. 'Thai place two blocks over. The green curry is good.'

I took the container. I told myself it was because I hadn't eaten since noon.

The texts were constant. Not overwhelming — just present, the way background noise is present. A dry observation about a new colleague who microwaved fish in the break room. A complaint about Seattle rain delivered with the betrayed tone of someone who had not anticipated that Seattle would be rainy. A one-line commentary on a photo I'd posted of the waterfront: 'You're running now? Since when do you run?'

I typed back: 'Since none of your business.'

He replied: 'Your form is terrible, by the way.'

I stared at my phone. 'You can't see my form from a photo.'

'I can tell from the angle you're holding the camera. You're hunching.'

I put my phone down. I picked it up again thirty seconds later.

'I'm not hunching,' I typed.

He sent back a single punctuation mark. A period. Like the conversation was settled.

I was irritated. I was always a little irritated. But I always responded, and somewhere in the back of my mind, in the part that was still learning to trust the evidence in front of it, I was keeping a quiet, careful count of every time he showed up.

He always showed up.

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