At our divorce hearing, my ex-husband sneered at my thrift-store dress while his glamorous fiancée laughed but just minutes later, I walked away with an inheritance he could never dream of matching.

74

The courthouse reeked faintly of bleach and broken dreams. I stood there in a faded thrift-store dress, clutching my late mother’s purse like armor. Across the table, my ex-husband, Mark, signed the divorce papers with a smirk sharp enough to cut glass.

Beside him, his new fiancée—young, flawless, shimmering in designer silk—leaned in and whispered something that made him laugh. She turned to me with mock sweetness. “Didn’t feel like dressing up for your big day, Emma?”

Mark didn’t even glance up.

“She’s never been one for appearances,” he said, tossing the pen aside. “Guess that’s why she’s history.”

The lawyer slid the last page toward me. My hand trembled as I signed away twelve years of marriage—for ten thousand dollars and a lifetime of what-ifs.

When they walked out, their laughter trailed behind them, cloying and unforgettable. I sat there alone, watching the ink dry beside my name, feeling like the world had just ended. Then my phone rang.

Unknown number.

For a moment, I thought about ignoring it. But something—instinct, desperation, fate—made me swipe to answer. “Ms.

Emma Hayes?” The voice was calm, professional. “This is David Lin from Lin & McCallister Law. I apologize for calling out of the blue, but I have some news regarding your great-uncle, Charles Whitmore.”

My heart stuttered.

Charles Whitmore? I hadn’t heard that name since childhood. He’d been the family’s phantom—rich, distant, and estranged long before my parents passed.

“I’m sorry to tell you he’s died,” David continued. “But he left you something—actually, everything. You’re his sole heir.”

I blinked.

“I think there’s been a mistake.”

“No mistake,” he said gently. “Mr. Whitmore left you his entire estate, including Whitmore Industries.”

I froze.

“You mean the Whitmore Industries—the energy company?”

“The same,” he replied. “You now control a multi-billion-dollar corporation. There is, however, one condition…”

His voice faded into static in my head.

I turned toward the courthouse window and caught my reflection—wrinkled dress, tired eyes, the shadow of a woman everyone had written off. Maybe my life wasn’t ending after all. Maybe it was just beginning.

Two days later, I was standing fifty floors above downtown Chicago in a glass conference room that overlooked the lake. The skyline glittered like a promise. I felt like an imposter in someone else’s life.

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