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The divorce proceedings turned into a stage for Carter’s collapsing pride.
Carter had brought an attorney named Blake, who looked young enough to still believe expensive cuff links could win an argument.
Blake opened with phrases like “emotional overreaction,” “temporary marital breakdown,” and “shared financial rights.”
That was one of her talents.
She allowed men to stack their arrogance into towers before calmly handing over the document that brought the whole thing down.
Blake stopped speaking.
I watched his jaw clench.
Blake cleared his throat.
The meeting lasted forty-two minutes.
Margaret said, “No.”
He looked at me then, truly looked at me, perhaps for the first time in years. Without the house, the money, the wife waiting for him at home, the mistress admiring him, he looked smaller. Not evil. Not monstrous. Just small.
Almost.
He tried guilt.
“You’re throwing away fifteen years.”
He tried nostalgia.
“Remember Maine? Remember our first apartment?”
He tried anger.
“You planned this like a psychopath.”
He tried pity.
“The company is suffering. People could lose jobs.”
That one almost worked. I cared about the employees. I had known some of them since Carter first hired them. But Margaret quickly discovered Whitmore Imports had been struggling for more than a year, not because of me, but because Carter had been using business credit lines for personal expenses, including gifts, dinners, and weekend trips with Vanessa.
Vanessa resigned two days after coming back from Dubai.
Not because of shame. Because of self-preservation.
Her father hired a lawyer and sent Carter a letter accusing him of abusing his authority as her employer. That was rich, considering she had been perfectly willing to enjoy first-class seats until the card declined, but I no longer needed fairness from people like Vanessa.
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