I let my lips curl, then pointed at his shirt cuff—at the empty hole where a cufflink should have been.

"Then I suppose a fan stole this too?"

It was a sapphire cufflink. I'd saved three months of freelance pay to buy it for his birthday.

At the bar tonight, I watched that girl take it between her lips, holding it there as she gazed up at him.

Aiden's hands finally stilled.

He lifted his gaze, those cold eyes flickering with impatience.

"Miranda, what's gotten into you today?"

He walked over, looming above me, a note of reproach threading through his voice. "I just got back from a business trip. I'm exhausted. Don't throw a tantrum over something this trivial."

"Trivial?"

I stared at the man I'd shared a bed with for three years—and felt like I was looking at a stranger.

"Aiden, were you really on a business trip?"

His expression frosted over instantly.

"What's that supposed to mean?"

His eyes narrowed, a dangerous edge radiating from him. "Have you been investigating me?"

"I haven't investigated anything."

I met his gaze steadily and gestured toward my ankle. "I just happened to go to a bar tonight to drag Glen home. And someone happened to smash a glass into me."

Aiden's eyes dropped to the wound on my ankle.

His pupils contracted—just barely.

But that was all.

He didn't ask who did it. He didn't ask if it hurt.

He just frowned slightly, as if trying to recall something.

A few seconds later, recognition dawned. A mocking smile curled his lips.

"So the blind idiot who got in the way—that was you."

He remembered now.

But there was no guilt. Not even a flicker.

Instead, he looked almost amused, settling into the sofa with casual indifference and lighting a cigarette.

"Miranda, since you've already seen everything, I won't bother pretending anymore."

He exhaled a ring of smoke. Through the haze, his features blurred, but his voice cut through—sharp as a blade left out in the cold.

"Yes, I was out having fun."

"I'm the Stephens heir. In circles like ours, playing the game is just how it works."

"But you—"

He pointed at me with the hand holding his cigarette, contempt plain in his eyes. "As Mrs. Stephens, can't you manage even this much grace?"

"So you got hit with a glass. You didn't die. Is that really worth giving me this corpse face?"

"Don't forget—when you married me, you had nothing."

"If it weren't for me, you'd still be scrambling to pay your deadbeat brother's tuition."