He Divorced The Gardener's Daughter, Then Her Father Took His Company-nhu9999 - Chainityai

He Divorced The Gardener’s Daughter, Then Her Father Took His Company-nhu9999

The sourdough was still rising when Preston Ashford ended his marriage.

Charlotte Kading had set the table for two because it was their fifth anniversary, and because some hopeful part of her still believed effort could revive what pride had starved.

There were white roses in a vase, candles from a Vermont weekend, and a roast chicken resting under foil.

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Preston came home at seven fifteen in a charcoal suit and placed a manila envelope beside her plate.

“Sign tonight,” he said, “or leave with nothing.”

Charlotte thought it was a cruel joke until he showed her the photo.

Isabella Vance stood under gala lights wearing the diamond necklace Charlotte had once pointed out in a window and then pretended not to want.

“She fits where I am going,” Preston said.

He told Charlotte that Ashford Dynamics was closing a historic merger with Helios Global in the morning.

He said billionaires needed wives who could stand beside them without embarrassing them.

Then he looked at her flour-dusted cardigan and said the sentence she would hear for months afterward.

“You are small, Charlotte.”

He mocked her shelter work, her bread, and the cottage in Connecticut where her father grew tomatoes in overalls.

He called Walter Kading a gardener who smelled like fertilizer.

Charlotte stood very still while Preston explained how carefully he had erased her.

The penthouse lease was in his name.

The car was company property.

The savings account had been drained months earlier.

The settlement was fifty thousand dollars and a warning not to fight him.

When he left, the bread burned in the oven and the smoke alarm screamed through a home that no longer belonged to her.

Charlotte sat on the kitchen floor and made two calls.

The first was to Maggie Torres, her best friend and one of the sharpest divorce lawyers in Brooklyn.

The second was to her father.

Maggie arrived before midnight in pajama pants, took one look at Charlotte, and asked the only question that mattered.

“Did you sign anything?”

Charlotte shook her head.

Maggie opened drawers, photographed receipts, copied bank statements, and found a burner phone hidden behind Preston’s quarterly reports.

She told Charlotte not to touch it.

“Evidence has a natural habitat,” Maggie said, already taking pictures.

At two in the morning, Charlotte drove to Connecticut with one bag and no plan.

Walter was waiting on the porch with his battered thermos.

He held her until she stopped shaking.

The next morning, she told him everything over coffee.

Walter listened like a man stacking stones inside himself.

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