
After My Husband Humiliated Me, I Took His Empire
Chapter 2
I left the gala with that dollar bill crumpled in my fist. The rain started as I reached our building—the penthouse Charlie bought with my Hudson Yards bonus. The one he gave to Rosie.
My jewelry. Mom's grandmother's necklace, the diamond earrings from our wedding. I could pawn them. Get enough for the surgery.
The elevator ride felt endless. My reflection in the mirrored walls showed a stranger—mascara streaked, dress wrinkled, eyes hollow. I looked away.
I unlocked the penthouse door. The lights were off except for a glow coming from the master bedroom. Our bedroom.
My hand froze on the doorknob. I should've known. Should've seen it coming. But some part of me—the stupid, loyal part—still hoped I was wrong.
I pushed the door open.
Charlie and Rosie. In our bed. The sheets I'd picked out, the mattress I'd researched for weeks to find the perfect one. Her red dress pooled on the floor next to his suit.
They didn't even notice me at first. Too wrapped up in each other.
Something inside me went quiet. Not angry. Not hurt. Just... cold. Clear.
I pulled out my phone and hit record. The camera captured everything—their faces, the room, the timestamp. Evidence. Always gather evidence before making a move.
The phone's light finally caught Charlie's attention. He jerked up, eyes wide.
"Selena—"
"Don't." My voice came out steady. Calm. "Don't say anything."
Rosie sat up, pulling the sheet around herself. That smirk was back. "Oh honey, did you really think he'd stay faithful to someone like you?"
I stopped recording and pocketed my phone. Walked to the closet and pulled out my old college duffel bag. Started throwing in clothes—jeans, shirts, my laptop. The essentials.
"Selena, let's talk about this." Charlie climbed out of bed, reaching for his pants. "You're overreacting."
"Overreacting." I laughed, and it sounded wrong even to my own ears. "You stole my commission. Froze our accounts. Let me beg on my knees while my mother is dying. And now this."
I grabbed Mom's necklace from my jewelry box. The earrings. My grandmother's ring.
"Those are community property," Rosie said. "You can't just—"
"Watch me."
I pulled off my wedding ring and set it on the nightstand. The gold band caught the light, mocking me with memories of promises that meant nothing.
"We'll talk tomorrow," Charlie said. "When you've calmed down."
I zipped the duffel bag and walked out. Didn't look back. Didn't cry. Didn't feel anything except that cold, clear certainty.
The rain had gotten worse. I walked without direction, my heels clicking against wet pavement. The jewelry box pressed against my ribs through the bag. Not enough. Even if I pawned everything, it wouldn't be enough for the surgery.
Manhattan blurred around me. Streetlights reflected in puddles. Car horns. Voices. The city kept moving while my world ended.
My legs gave out near Central Park. One second I was walking, the next I was on my knees on the sidewalk, rain soaking through my dress. The duffel bag slipped from my shoulder.
I couldn't get up. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't—
Tires squealed. A car door slammed.
"Selena!"
Hands lifted me. Strong, careful. A voice I hadn't heard in years.
"I've got you. You're okay. I've got you."
Emmett Shaw. From Columbia. From before Charlie, before everything went wrong.
He carried me to his car, and I didn't have the strength to protest. The leather seats were warm. Dry. The driver pulled away from the curb, and I watched the rain-soaked streets disappear behind us.
"Your mother," Emmett said quietly. "Sarah told me. The surgery's covered. Anonymous donor. She's in pre-op now."
I turned to look at him. Really look at him. Same dark eyes, same careful expression. But older now. Successful. The tech mogul everyone talked about.
"You—"
"Don't thank me. Just rest."
I woke up in a room I didn't recognize. Soft sheets. Morning light filtering through gauze curtains. For a moment, I forgot everything. Then it all crashed back.
Sarah sat in a chair beside the bed, her eyes red.
"Mom's out of surgery," she said. "She's stable. They said it went perfectly."
I started crying then. Finally. All of it pouring out—the humiliation, the betrayal, the fear. Sarah held me while I shattered.
A knock on the door. Emmett stood in the doorway, holding two cups of coffee.
"I'll give you two a minute," Sarah said, squeezing my hand before leaving.
Emmett set one cup on the nightstand and sat in the chair Sarah had vacated. He didn't speak right away. Just waited.
"Why?" I finally asked. "Why help me?"
"Because I know what you're capable of. What you've always been capable of." He leaned forward. "Charlie's been taking credit for your work for years. Everyone in the industry knows it, even if they won't say it out loud."
"I don't have anything left. No job, no money, no—"
"You have your mind. Your talent. Your drive." He paused. "Shaw Enterprises needs a VP of Strategy. I need someone who can see three moves ahead, who understands development from the ground up. I need you, Selena. Not as a favor. As a business decision."
I looked at him. At the genuine respect in his eyes. At the opportunity he was offering.
"When do I start?"
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