“Take it, Emily. It should be enough to cover a cheap place for a month. Consider it compensation for two years of wasted time.”
From the corner, his girlfriend Vanessa let out a quiet giggle, already imagining how she would redesign Ethan’s penthouse.
To them, Emily was nothing—someone with no future and nowhere to go.
They assumed she was weak.
They completely ignored the man in the charcoal suit seated quietly at the back of the room.
They had no idea he was Alexander Reed—the building’s owner… and Emily’s father.
And they certainly didn’t realize that signing those papers had just cost Ethan everything .
The conference room at Harrison & Cole carried the scent of leather, stale coffee, and finality.
Rain streaked the tall windows overlooking the city.
Emily sat calmly on one side of the table, hands resting in her lap. She wore a simple cream sweater, no jewelry—her wedding ring had been gone for days.
Across from her sat Ethan.
Impeccable suit. Luxury watch.
A confident smile that felt almost cruel.
“Let’s not drag this out,” he said, sliding the documents toward her. “We both know this marriage is over.”
“Over…” Emily repeated softly, her eyes falling on the title: Dissolution of Marriage.
“Don’t play the victim,” he added. “You were a waitress when I met you.
I gave you a better life.”
He leaned back with a smirk.
He paused, shrugging.
“Forgettable.”
Vanessa didn’t even look up from her phone.
“She really is. And those meals she cooked? Embarrassing.”
Ethan laughed.
“My company is going public next month,” he continued.
“My team says it’s better if I’m single. A cleaner image than being married to someone like you.”
Emily met his gaze.
“So now I’m bad for your stock value?”
“It’s business. Don’t take it personally.”
He tapped the papers.
“The prenup says you get nothing.
But I’m generous.”
He flicked the black card toward her.
The lawyer beside him hesitated.
“The car technically—”
“Let her keep it,” Ethan cut in. “I’m being kind.”
He smiled again.
“Go ahead. Sign it.
I have lunch plans.”
Emily looked at the documents… then at the card.
Two years ago, he wasn’t like this.
Back then, he was struggling to keep his startup alive. She had supported him, organized everything, believed in him when no one else did. She had even used her own savings to help his company survive.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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