
After My Ex-Husband Lost Everything, I Took His Home
Chapter 2
The air inside the Howell Industries headquarters smelled of ozone and panic. It was the scent of a sinking ship. Phones rang in a discordant symphony that no one bothered to answer, and the few employees who hadn't already cleared their desks scurried through the hallways, avoiding eye contact with the executive suite.
I walked through the glass doors of Mark’s office without knocking. The receptionist, a young woman who used to look at me with pity when I waited for my husband, now stared at the floor, trembling.
Mark was pacing. His tie was gone, his collar unbuttoned, and dark circles had bruised the skin beneath his eyes. He stopped when he saw me, his mouth opening to form a command that died in his throat.
"Suppliers have halted everything, Amaia," he rasped, his voice cracking. "The raw materials for the Radiance Tech order—they’re sitting on the docks. They won't move them without authorization from the creditor."
"I know," I said, my voice cool and smooth, like water over stone. "I gave the order."
I moved past him. The leather executive chair behind the mahogany desk—the throne he had inherited and squandered—was still warm from his body. I sat down, crossing my legs and resting my hands on the armrests. The leather groaned under the shift in power.
Mark blinked, his face flushing a deep, humiliated crimson. He stood on the other side of the desk, looking down at me, yet somehow, he was the one who looked small.
"Get out of my chair," he whispered, though there was no heat in it. Only exhaustion.
"It’s not your chair, Mark. It’s an asset," I corrected him, sliding a single sheet of paper across the polished wood. "This is the new repayment schedule. The interest rates have been adjusted to reflect your... volatility."
He snatched the paper, his eyes scanning the numbers. "This is impossible. You’re asking for forty percent of our liquid capital by Friday. We can’t survive this."
"Then don't," I said, leaning back. "Liquidation is always an option. I’m sure the house in the suburbs is still available."
I left him staring at the paper, his hands shaking so hard the page rattled like a dying breath.
***
That evening, the atmosphere shifted from the desperate sweat of failure to the chilled air of old money. The Pacific Investment Summit was held in a penthouse overlooking the sound, a world away from Mark’s crumbling kingdom. Here, power wasn’t shouted; it was whispered over twenty-year-old scotch.
I stood near the floor-to-ceiling windows, watching the reflection of the room. Most of the men here gave me a wide berth. They had heard about the engagement party. They knew I was the predator who had just hamstrung a legacy company. Fear is a potent perfume, and I wore it well.
"You wield a sledgehammer with the precision of a scalpel," a deep voice murmured beside me.
I turned. Wells Ortiz stood there, swirling an amber liquid in a crystal glass. He was taller than Mark, broader, with eyes that were intelligent and unsettlingly perceptive. He didn't look at me like a curiosity or a threat. He looked at me like I was a riddle he had already solved.
"Mark Howell was a structural weakness," I replied, keeping my guard up. "I just applied pressure."
Wells took a slow sip of his drink, his gaze never leaving mine. "Business is usually about profit, Ms. Howell. But what you did to his supply chain today? That wasn't about margins. That was an execution."
"Is that a critique, Mr. Ortiz?"
"An observation," he said, the corner of his mouth tilting upward. "Most people in this room would have bought him out quietly. You wanted him to feel the ground give way. It’s personal."
He raised his glass in a silent toast, a gesture of recognition rather than judgment. For the first time since my surgery, I felt a spark of something other than cold rage. He saw the monster in me, and he didn't flinch.
***
The next morning, my temporary office in the downtown financial district was breached. The door swung open with a violence that rattled the frame, and Diana Owens stormed in. She was wearing Chanel, but the hem was frayed, and her makeup was applied with a heavy hand, trying to conceal the stress lines carving canyons into her face.
"You ungrateful little mute!" she shrieked, slamming her purse onto my desk. "You think you can just walk in here and destroy my son? After everything we did for you?"
I didn't look up from the file I was reading. I simply tapped my pen against the desk, a rhythmic, ticking sound. *Click. Click. Click.*
"We gave you a home!" she spat, leaning over the desk, her perfume cloying and stale. "We tolerated your silence! And this is how you repay us? By stealing his company?"
I finally looked up. I let my gaze drift over her face, lingering on the frantic pulse in her neck, the way her foundation had settled into the creases of her skin.
"Tolerated," I repeated, testing the word. "Is that what you call it when you force a man to divorce the wife who saved his daughter's life?"
"I did what was necessary for this family's image!" Diana insisted, though her voice wavered under my stare.
"Image," I said softly. "Speaking of image, Diana, your filler is migrating. You look tired."
She gasped, her hand flying to her cheek. "How dare you—"
"And poor," I added, cutting her off. I opened a drawer and pulled out a ledger, tossing it onto the desk next to her purse. "The Emerald City Casino called. Apparently, the 'Howell Matriarch' has a line of credit that’s three months overdue. Two hundred thousand dollars in baccarat losses?"
Diana froze. The color drained from her face, leaving the rouge standing out like clown paint.
"If Mark knew you were gambling away his bailout money," I mused, leaning forward, my voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, "I wonder if he’d still listen to Mommy’s advice."
Diana snatched her purse, her hands trembling violently. She opened her mouth to speak, but for the first time in her life, she had nothing to say. She turned and fled, the click of her heels sounding like a retreat.
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