Her Ex Claimed Her Family Company. One Call Ended Everything-mdue - Chainityai

Her Ex Claimed Her Family Company. One Call Ended Everything-mdue

The day my divorce became official, the Manhattan courthouse smelled like old paper, hot pavement, and burnt coffee from the cart near the steps.

I remember that because I was trying very hard to remember anything except the fact that my marriage had just been reduced to a judge’s signature.

Five years.

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One black stamp.

One final decree warming in my right hand.

Dominic walked out behind me like he had just won a case instead of lost a wife.

He wore the sharp navy Italian suit I had bought him two Christmases earlier, back when I still believed a generous wife could help a proud man feel secure.

Natalie was on his arm.

Her red dress caught the sunlight before her face did.

Then I saw the Louis Vuitton bag on her wrist, and for one strange second, my brain did something cruel and practical.

It matched the bag to the corporate credit card statement from three months earlier.

The charge had cleared on a Thursday.

Dominic had told me he was taking a potential client to lunch.

Natalie saw me looking at the bag.

Then she smiled.

Not nervously.

Not apologetically.

Proudly.

“Audrey,” she said, drawing my name out as if she had been waiting all morning to use it. “You look… incredibly tired.”

Dominic laughed under his breath.

That laugh used to soften me.

In the early days, before Crestwood Holdings became the thing he wanted more than me, he would laugh like that over cheap takeout on the kitchen floor of our brownstone.

He would sit cross-legged beside me with soy sauce packets between us and talk about wanting to build things that lasted.

He said he hated men who married into money and forgot where they came from.

I believed him so fiercely that I fought my father for him.

That was my first real mistake.

Trust is not always stolen all at once.

Sometimes you hand it over in small, polished pieces until the person holding it realizes he can use it as a key.

“Well,” Dominic said, smoothing his cufflink with two fingers, “I guess we can finally stop pretending.”

“At least one of us started pretending at some point,” I said.

Natalie’s smile flickered.

Dominic’s jaw tightened for half a second, then relaxed into that boardroom expression he used whenever he wanted to sound reasonable while doing something ugly.

“You still do that,” he said. “Act like you’re above everyone. That’s why this marriage didn’t work.”

“Funny,” I said. “I thought it didn’t work because you kept sleeping with junior designers who thought Venmo screenshots counted as romance.”

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