He Mocked His Silent Wife, Then Her Billionaire Father Stood Up-nga9999 - Chainityai

He Mocked His Silent Wife, Then Her Billionaire Father Stood Up-nga9999

The conference room smelled like expensive leather, bitter coffee, and rainwater drying in wool coats.

Outside the glass wall, the city had disappeared into a gray sheet of weather.

Inside, every sound felt polished and cruel.

Image

A chair leg scraped.

A pen clicked.

A stack of divorce papers slid across a mahogany table as if two years of marriage could be moved with one hand.

Elise sat at the far end of the table with her hands folded neatly in her lap.

She wore a cream cardigan, soft and modest, the kind of thing someone might wear to a school meeting or a quiet office job.

It looked almost out of place beside the tailored suits, glossy shoes, and watches bright enough to catch the ceiling lights.

There was no jewelry on her.

Not a necklace.

Not earrings.

Not the wedding ring she had removed three days earlier and left in a small white dish beside the bathroom sink.

Across from her, Kenton Stanley looked relaxed.

That was the first insult.

Not the words.

Not the papers.

The ease.

He sat back in his chair as if this meeting were one more calendar item before lunch, one more signature on the way to the life he believed he deserved.

Kenton had always known how to perform success.

Tailored navy suit.

Italian shoes.

Rolex under the sleeve.

Smile sharp enough to make people mistake cruelty for confidence.

VisionCore, his company, was supposed to go public the next month.

For weeks, he had been walking around like the IPO had already happened, like wealth was a weather system moving toward him and everyone else was lucky to stand beneath it.

His attorney sat beside him, a narrow man with damp skin at his collar and a legal pad full of notes he kept pretending to read.

Near the window, Bianca sat with one leg crossed over the other, phone in hand, looking too dressed up for a divorce meeting.

She wore the expression of a woman already deciding where someone else’s furniture would go.

Elise noticed everything.

She always had.

People mistook quiet women for empty ones because it made them feel safer.

Kenton had made that mistake for two years.

At 9:17 a.m., the attorney slid the divorce packet toward her.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *