
After My Husband Humiliated Me, I Took His Empire
Chapter 3
The divorce papers arrived at Charlie's office on a Tuesday morning. I didn't deliver them myself—let the process server handle that pleasure. I was at Shaw Enterprises, reviewing acquisition targets with Emmett's team, when my phone buzzed.
Charlie's name flashed across the screen. I let it ring. Then ring again. On the third call, I answered.
"You think you can just walk away?" His voice was tight. Controlled. The tone he used when investors questioned his projections.
"The papers are straightforward. Sign them."
"We need to talk. In person. My office. Tomorrow at ten."
I hung up without answering.
That night, I couldn't sleep. I pulled out every file I had on Hudson Yards—contracts, amendments, addendums. Years of work spread across Emmett's guest room floor. My coffee went cold as I read through clause after clause, searching for something I knew had to be there.
Then I found it. Page forty-seven of the original land acquisition agreement. A clause I'd written myself three years ago, back when I still believed Charlie valued my contributions.
Founder's Prerogative: The primary strategist retains the right to alter land designation until final project completion and ribbon-cutting ceremony.
I'd buried it in legal language, surrounded by standard boilerplate about zoning compliance and environmental reviews. Charlie never read contracts—he just signed where I told him to sign.
My hands shook as I pulled out my laptop. The land was still in my name. Technically. A technicality Charlie had overlooked because he never imagined I'd use it.
I could donate it. Transfer it to the city. Make it worthless for commercial development.
The thought made me smile for the first time in days.
I showed up at Charlie's office at ten sharp. Rosie sat behind the reception desk now, wearing a designer suit that screamed new money. She looked up from her phone and smirked.
"He's waiting for you."
Charlie's office looked different. Rosie's touches everywhere—fresh flowers, abstract art, a new coffee machine. She'd already moved in, claimed her territory.
Charlie sat behind his desk, Rosie standing beside him. A united front.
"Selena." He gestured to the chair across from him. "Sit."
I remained standing.
"Let's make this simple," Rosie said, sliding a folder across the desk. "We know you hold the IP rights to the Hudson Yards design. That clause you snuck into your employment contract."
I'd forgotten about that. Another protection I'd built in, back when I still had hope.
"We're prepared to be generous," Charlie continued. "Sign over the rights, and we'll process the divorce quickly. No fuss."
"And if I don't?"
Rosie pulled out her phone, tapped the screen, and turned it toward me. Photos. Me and Emmett. Leaving his building. Getting into his car. Doctored timestamps made it look like the affair started months ago, while I was still living with Charlie.
"Imagine what the industry will think," Rosie said softly. "The brilliant strategist who slept her way to the top. First with her husband, now with his competitor."
My stomach turned.
"And your mother," Charlie added, leaning back in his chair. "That anonymous donation for her surgery? We'll claim it was insurance fraud. Medical identity theft. She could face charges."
"You wouldn't—"
"Try me."
The room felt smaller. Hotter. I gripped the back of the chair to steady myself.
"What do you want?"
"Full IP rights to Hudson Yards," Charlie said. "Signed over after the launch. We need you to be present at the ribbon cutting, smiling for the cameras. Show everyone there's no bad blood."
"And then?"
"Then you disappear. Take your divorce settlement and go."
I looked at them—Charlie with his false confidence, Rosie with her hungry eyes. They thought they'd won. Thought they'd broken me completely.
I let my shoulders slump. Let my voice crack. "You'll leave Mom alone? No charges, no accusations?"
"As long as you cooperate," Rosie said.
I reached for the folder, pulled out the agreement. My hands trembled as I read through it. Perfect. They wanted me to sign after the launch, after the ribbon cutting. After my Founder's Prerogative expired.
Except it didn't expire at the launch. It expired at the ribbon cutting. And I controlled the timing of that ceremony.
"I need time," I whispered. "To process this."
"You have until the launch," Charlie said. "Two weeks. Show up, smile pretty, and sign the papers. Then you're free."
I nodded, clutching the folder to my chest like a shield. Walked to the door on shaking legs.
"Oh, and Selena?" Rosie's voice stopped me. "Don't try anything clever. We're watching."
I left without looking back. Made it to the elevator before I let myself breathe.
They thought they'd crushed me. Thought I'd surrendered.
They had no idea what I was about to do.
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