
After He Cheated, I Took His Billion-Dollar Empire
After He Cheated, I Took His Billion-Dollar Empire Chapter 1
I stared at the divorce papers sliding across my mahogany desk, watching them come to rest before me like a death sentence. Except this time, I felt nothing but cold clarity washing through me. This was the sixth time Ryan had demanded a divorce, but today would be different. Today, I wouldn't beg.
Across from me sat Lawrence Pritchard, Ryan's attorney, his expression a practiced blend of professional detachment and subtle condescension. The afternoon light filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Nob Hill penthouse office, casting long shadows across the polished surfaces. Outside, San Francisco continued its bustling pace, unaware that my decade-long marriage was ending in this sterile exchange.
"Mrs. Sterling," Lawrence began, his voice carrying the rehearsed sympathy I'd grown to despise, "Mr. Sterling believes this is the best path forward for both parties. A clean break."
I tucked a strand of hair behind my ear, a habit I couldn't shake even now. "A clean break," I repeated, the words tasting like ash. "After twelve years of building an empire together."
Lawrence shifted uncomfortably under my steady gaze. He'd expected tears, hysteria perhaps—the same emotional display I'd given the previous five times. Instead, he found himself facing a woman transformed, one whose grief had crystallized into something harder, sharper.
"The terms are generous," he continued, tapping the document with his manicured finger. "Mr. Sterling is prepared to—"
"I'll sign," I interrupted, my voice steady.
Lawrence blinked rapidly, clearly thrown off script. "I—excuse me?"
"I said I'll sign the papers." I leaned forward, placing my palms flat on the desk. "But I have conditions."
The door to the office burst open, and Ryan strode in, his tall frame radiating the confident authority that had once made my heart race. Now, I saw only the hollow shell of the man I'd loved—expensive suit, perfect hair, and eyes that couldn't quite meet mine.
"What's taking so long?" he demanded, glancing between Lawrence and me. "Has she agreed?"
"Actually," Lawrence began, "Mrs. Sterling was just—"
"I want forty-five percent of the company equity," I stated flatly, cutting through the tension. "All intellectual property rights to the core algorithms I developed. And full severance packages for any employees displaced in the transition."
Ryan staggered back as if I'd physically struck him. For a moment, genuine shock registered on his face—the first authentic emotion I'd seen from him in months.
"You can't be serious," he finally managed, his voice strangled. "The company is going public in six months. You know what that equity will be worth?"
"Exactly what it should be worth," I replied, my tone even. "I built the foundation of this company with my own hands, Ryan. My code, my strategies, my sacrifices."
His face darkened, that familiar storm of rage gathering behind his eyes. "Your sacrifices? I was the one out there closing every major deal while you hid behind your computer!"
"And who built what you were selling?" I stood slowly, power shifting in the room as I did. "Who stayed up for three days straight debugging the platform before our first major investor meeting? Who redesigned the entire security architecture when we were nearly hacked?"
Ryan's jaw clenched, his hand unconsciously adjusting his Rolex—his tell when cornered. "This is ridiculous. I won't agree to this."
"Then we can let a judge decide," I replied calmly. "I'm sure the court would be interested in the company's financial records. Particularly those offshore accounts you think I don't know about."
The color drained from his face. With a muttered curse, he stormed toward the door, pausing only to hurl back, "You'll regret this, Elena. I made you. Remember that."
The door slammed behind him, leaving a ringing silence. Lawrence cleared his throat awkwardly, gathering his papers. "I'll... have these terms drafted for review."
After he left, I moved to the window, watching the fog roll in across the bay. My mind drifted back to a sun-drenched vineyard in Napa Valley last year—Ryan and Madison Blake, his best friend's wife, standing too close during the wedding photos. Her hand lingering on his arm, her laughter at his jokes too intimate, too knowing. I'd felt a prickle of unease then, quickly dismissed as paranoia.
Now, that memory took on a new, sickening clarity. The betrayal hadn't begun with the night I caught them together. It had been building long before, right in front of me, while I was too loyal, too trusting to see it.
I pressed my palm against the cool glass, watching my wedding ring catch the fading light. For the first time in months, I felt something stirring beneath the numbness—not grief or love, but something far more dangerous.
Purpose.
After He Cheated, I Took His Billion-Dollar Empire of Contents
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