
You Can't Afford Your Genius Ex-Wife Now
Chapter 2
Fifty miles away, in the heart of Manhattan, the Velasquez Group headquarters pierced the sky. The top floor was a fortress of glass and steel, designed to make anyone who entered feel small.
Jack Velasquez stood by the floor-to-ceiling window, his reflection a dark smudge against the gray city skyline. He had just ended a video call with the London office. The numbers were good. The acquisition was on track. But the cold satisfaction he usually felt was absent.
The door opened behind him. Miles Sterling, his executive assistant, stepped inside. Miles was efficient, emotionless, and loyal to a fault. But today, his usual calm was replaced by a tight, anxious energy.
"Sir," Miles said, holding out a tablet. "Miss Lindsey's latest medical report just came in."
Jack turned. He took the tablet, his eyes scanning the screen. The CT scans were a mess of shadows and light. The tumor was growing. It was pressing against the brainstem, a spiderweb of death weaving through the most vital part of the nervous system.
"The local team has reviewed it," Miles continued, his voice careful. "They say the surgical risk is over ninety percent. They can't operate."
Jack's hand tightened on the tablet. The plastic casing groaned under the pressure of his grip. He threw the device onto his desk. It landed with a heavy thud, the screen cracking from corner to corner.
"I don't want excuses," Jack said, his voice low and dangerous. "I want a solution."
He walked to his desk and picked up a framed photograph. It showed a young man in a security uniform, smiling easily at the camera. Arvil Holder.
Arvil had taken a bullet meant for Jack. He had died in a pool of blood on a warehouse floor, his last words a plea for Jack to look after his sister. Kristen.
Jack had failed Arvil. He had let Kristen get sick. He would not fail her again.
"Find her," Jack ordered, his tone leaving no room for argument.
Miles hesitated. "You mean... 'The Surgeon', sir? She's a ghost. There are no public records, no hospital affiliations, no published papers under that name. She hasn't been seen in three years."
"I don't care if she's on the moon," Jack snapped. "Use every resource the Velasquez Group has. Turn over every rock in the world. Tell them price is not an object. I will pay whatever she asks."
"Yes, sir," Miles said, turning to leave.
He paused at the door. "There is one more thing, sir. Regarding the... divorce finalization."
Jack's spine stiffened. The word 'divorce' left a bad taste in his mouth. Not because he missed his wife-he could barely summon a clear picture of her quiet, forgettable face-but because it was a loose end. A failure.
"What is it?" he barked.
"Her lawyer confirmed it this morning," Miles said, keeping his eyes on the floor. "Ms. Randall waived all spousal support. She didn't take a single cent."
Jack went still. A flicker of surprise crossed his face, quickly replaced by a sneer. He had expected a fight. He had expected the woman from the Rust Belt to cling to the Velasquez fortune like a leech.
"Smart girl," he muttered, turning back to the window. "She knows she wouldn't have gotten away with it anyway."
He dismissed the thought entirely. Kailey Randall was a transaction, a two-year contract that had expired. She was irrelevant.
"Consider her closed," Jack said. "Don't waste my time with trivial matters again."
Miles nodded and slipped out of the office.
Meanwhile, across the East River in Brooklyn, a Ford F-150 pulled up in front of a narrow brick building. The neighborhood was loud, the sidewalks cracked, and the air smelled of street food and exhaust. It was the polar opposite of the Velasquez estate.
Kailey stepped out of the truck, breathing in the chaotic energy of the city. She looked up at the third-floor window. A small smile played on her lips.
Harley carried her suitcase up the narrow stairs. The apartment was tiny-a studio with a kitchenette, a bed that folded into the wall, and a desk that took up half the room.
Kailey walked to the center of the room. She spun around slowly, taking in the peeling paint and the view of the fire escape.
"It's perfect," she said, her voice warm. "It's mine."
She knelt beside the suitcase and unzipped it. Inside, neatly packed, were no clothes. Instead, there was a rolled-up leather case, worn smooth by years of use. She unrolled it on the desk, revealing a set of surgical instruments. They gleamed under the bare bulb, polished to a mirror shine.
She picked up a scalpel. It balanced perfectly between her fingers. With a flick of her wrist, she spun it, the blade catching the light in a blur of silver. The movement was fluid, instinctive, like breathing.
Harley watched her, a shiver running down his spine. The woman standing in front of him wasn't the quiet, defeated wife he had picked up this morning. This was someone else entirely.
"The Surgeon," he said again, testing the word. "What does that even mean, Kai?"
Kailey set the scalpel down, its weight still familiar against her palm. She looked at her brother, seeing the confusion etched into his face—the same face that had been her only anchor during those two silent years.
"It means I spent every hour Jack thought I was shopping or at charity luncheons in a basement lab at Columbia," she said, her voice steady. "Dr. Julian Adler—he's the Chief of Neurosurgery at New York General—took a chance on me. He let me assist on research, run simulations, keep my skills sharp. I've been preparing for this moment since the day I signed the marriage contract."
Harley stared at her. "So all that time, when the society pages called you a recluse..."
"I was operating on cadavers and publishing under a pseudonym." A small, fierce smile touched her lips. "The Surgeon wasn't a myth. She was just waiting for her cage door to open."
Kailey turned back to the window, looking out at the distant Manhattan skyline, its towers catching the last light of the setting sun. Somewhere in that skyline was New York General Hospital. Tomorrow, she would walk through its doors not as Kailey Velasquez, but as Dr. Kailey Randall.
"Get some rest, Harley," she said quietly. "Tomorrow, everything changes."
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