She Ended the Marriage, Then Took Back the Company He Stole-mdue - Chainityai

She Ended the Marriage, Then Took Back the Company He Stole-mdue

The day my divorce became official, Manhattan smelled like rain, exhaust, and the burnt coffee from a cart parked outside the courthouse.

It should have felt like an ending.

Instead, it felt like the first honest moment I had lived through in five years.

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I stood on the courthouse steps holding a final divorce decree in my right hand while traffic roared behind me and a woman in heels laughed too loudly into her phone near the curb.

Dominic came out smiling.

My ex-husband had always known how to dress for an audience.

That afternoon, he wore a sharp navy Italian suit, platinum cufflinks, polished shoes, and the relaxed face of a man who believed the worst thing that could happen to him had already passed.

It had not.

Natalie hung from his arm in a tight red dress, her manicured fingers wrapped around the handle of a brand-new Louis Vuitton bag.

I recognized the bag immediately.

My corporate credit card statement had cleared that charge three months earlier.

She noticed me looking.

Then she smiled.

“Audrey,” she said, stretching my name until it sounded small and cheap. “You look… incredibly tired.”

Dominic gave a soft laugh.

Years earlier, that laugh had made me feel safe.

It was the sound he used in our brownstone kitchen when we ate takeout straight from the containers because both of us were too tired to plate dinner.

It was the sound he used outside a Boston hotel when snow stuck to my hair and he kissed my forehead under the awning.

It was the sound he used when he promised me he would never become the kind of man who married into money and forgot where he came from.

On the courthouse steps, it sounded like a warning.

“Well,” Dominic said, adjusting his cufflinks. “I guess we can finally stop pretending, can’t we?”

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

Natalie’s smile cracked.

Dominic’s jaw tightened for half a second, then smoothed itself back into executive calm.

“You still do that,” he said. “Act like you’re above everyone else. That’s exactly 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.”

Natalie inhaled sharply.

Dominic stepped into my space before she could answer.

I could smell his cologne.

It was expensive, woodsy, and sharp enough to turn my stomach.

“Careful,” he whispered. “You’re not as untouchable as you think you are anymore.”

That was when I saw him clearly.

Not the ambitious architect I had brought home to my father.

Not the young husband I had defended at board dinners, charity events, and private family breakfasts where everyone else could see the hunger under his manners.

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