She signed the divorce papers without a word—no one realized her billionaire father was seated quietly at the back of the room… The ink on the documents hadn’t even fully set when Ethan Carter let out a low chuckle and casually flicked a black Amex card onto the polished mahogany table. “Go ahead, Emily. That should be enough to rent some tiny place for a month. Think of it as payment for the two years you wasted being my wife.” From the side of the room, his lover Vanessa laughed under her breath, already picturing how she would redesign Ethan’s luxury penthouse. They believed Emily was nothing more than a poor girl with no family to fall back on. They thought she was sitting there, afraid. What they didn’t notice was the man in the charcoal suit sitting silently in the back. They didn’t know he was Alexander Reed—the owner of the entire building… and Emily’s father. And they had no idea that the moment she signed those papers, Ethan had just lost everything. The conference room at Harrison & Cole carried the scent of leather, stale coffee, and a marriage falling apart. It sat high above the city skyline, the rain-streaked windows framing a gray, distant Phoenix. Emily sat quietly on one side of the long table. Her hands rested gently in her lap. She wore a simple cream cardigan, slightly worn, with no jewelry—not even her wedding ring, which she had taken off days earlier. Across from her sat Ethan. He looked every bit the successful entrepreneur he claimed to be. His tailored navy suit, his expensive watch, his sharp, confident smile. “Let’s not complicate this, Emily,” he said, sliding the stack of papers toward her. The pages brushed softly against the table. “We’re both tired. This marriage was a mistake from the start.” “A mistake…” she repeated quietly. Her voice was calm, her eyes steady on the bold title at the top: “Dissolution of Marriage.” “Don’t start acting like a victim,” Ethan sighed, leaning back. “When we met, you were just a waitress. I thought I was helping you. Giving you a better life. But you never belonged in my world.” He gestured dismissively. “You don’t know how to act at events. You don’t know how to speak to investors. You’re just… dull.” Vanessa chimed in, barely looking up from her phone. “She really is boring, Ethan. And her cooking? It’s embarrassing.” Ethan laughed. “My company’s about to go public next month. My team says it’s better if I’m single. Looks cleaner.” Emily looked at him. “So two years of marriage… and now I’m a liability?” “It’s business,” he replied. “Don’t get emotional.” He tapped the papers. “The prenup says you get nothing. But I’m being generous.” He tossed the card toward her. “There’s money on it. Enough for a fresh start somewhere cheap. And you can keep the old car.” “I don’t want your money, Ethan,” Emily said quietly. “And I don’t want the car either…”...

She never asked for public credit. She never asked for a title.

She asked only for honesty.

For a while, she thought she had it.

Then the numbers started improving, the office grew, the press arrived, and Ethan slowly became the kind of man who confused being admired with being important. By the time the first major investment landed, he had started talking about optics, circles, image, positioning.

By the time Vanessa appeared, he had started talking about Emily as if she were an outdated version of his life.

“Don’t act like the victim now,” Ethan said, snapping her back into the room. He loosened one cuff, glanced at her sweater, and gave a thin smile. “You were a waitress when I met you, Emily. I thought I was helping you. Giving you a better life.”

The words sat on the table between them like spilled poison. Emily did not move.

Ethan mistook that for weakness and continued.

“But you never really fit,” he said. “You don’t know how to dress for the rooms I’m in now. You don’t know how to speak to investors. You don’t understand strategy, and frankly…” He shrugged. “You’re just forgettable.”

Vanessa looked up this time. “That’s harsh,” she said lightly, though her grin suggested she enjoyed every syllable. “Not inaccurate, though.”

Neither lawyer spoke.

Emily’s attorney shifted in her chair, but Emily lifted one hand slightly without taking her eyes off Ethan. It was a tiny gesture, yet it carried a simple instruction: let him finish showing everyone who he is.

Ethan breathed out through his nose, irritated by the silence. “My company is going public next month. My team has made it clear that appearing stable, modern, and unattached is better for the brand than staying married to…” He let the sentence trail off, as though the end was too obvious to deserve language.

“To someone like me?” Emily supplied.

He gave her a pleased look, the way a man might smile when an unpleasant task becomes easier. “Exactly.”

She studied him for a moment that felt longer than it was. “So I’m bad for your stock price now.”

“It’s business,” Ethan said. “Don’t take it personally.”

read more in next page

For complete cooking times, go to the next page or click the Open button (>), and don't forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends.