
After My Husband Wished for Divorce, I Became His Boss
Chapter 3
I stood in our bedroom—no, James's bedroom now—watching as the movers methodically wrapped plastic sheeting around each family portrait. My wedding photo, the candid shot from our trip to Santorini, the formal portrait with my parents—all disappearing under translucent shrouds like ghosts of a life that no longer existed.
A single suitcase lay open on the bed, pathetically empty considering I was packing away two years of marriage. What does one take when leaving everything behind? I placed my damaged locket inside, wrapped in silk. Though broken beyond repair, I couldn't bear to leave it.
"These go in storage," directed a voice from the doorway. Rachel stood there, clipboard in hand, directing the dismantling of my life with the efficiency of a military general. "And be careful with the frames—we'll be replacing the photos, not the frames."
I watched as a mover carried in a large canvas print—Rachel and James at some charity event, her arm possessively linked through his. The replacement was already prepared. How long had she been planning this?
"The movers need this area clear in five minutes," Rachel announced, not looking at me directly. "James said to tell you your car service is waiting."
Of course he couldn't even face me himself. I closed my suitcase with trembling hands.
"I'll need more time to pack my—"
"Your clothes will be donated," Rachel interrupted. "James thought it would be... cleaner this way. A fresh start for everyone."
I bit back the acid response rising in my throat. This wasn't the time. Instead, I slipped my grandmother's sapphire ring—the one piece of jewelry I'd been wearing—into my pocket. At least she couldn't take that from me.
As I wheeled my suitcase down the grand staircase, I caught glimpses of more changes already underway. The living room furniture rearranged. My books boxed up. Rachel's belongings spread throughout like an invasive species claiming new territory.
I didn't look back as the car pulled away.
---
The Manhattan skyline glittered against the night sky as the driver pulled up to my family's Upper East Side townhouse. Snow dusted the ground, a stark contrast to the perpetual sunshine I'd left behind in Los Angeles. I'd forgotten how brutal February could be in New York.
The housekeeper, Mrs. Chen, opened the door before I could ring the bell, her familiar face a balm to my raw emotions.
"Miss Isabella," she said softly, taking my coat. "Your father and brother are waiting in the dining room."
I nodded, steeling myself. This homecoming would not be a warm one.
The dining room was exactly as I remembered—imposing mahogany table stretching beneath a crystal chandelier, silver service gleaming, and my father at the head, face impassive as stone. Ethan sat to his right, his expression a mirror of our father's disapproval.
Frost seemed to emanate from the table itself as I took my seat.
"So," my father began, not looking up from cutting his steak, "the experiment is over."
I stared at the plate placed before me, unable to imagine eating. "It wasn't an experiment, Father. It was my marriage."
"A marriage we advised against," Ethan interjected, his voice sharp. "A marriage to a man who clearly had no idea who you really were."
"Who I really am," I corrected quietly.
My father's knife scraped against fine china. "And what did you gain from this... adventure, Isabella? Besides wasting two years of your life?"
Something inside me cracked. The careful composure I'd maintained since James's betrayal shattered like glass.
"You want to know what I gained?" My voice trembled as I pushed up my sleeve, revealing the yellowing bruises I'd so carefully concealed. "I gained these when my husband shoved me aside to comfort his manipulative sister-in-law. I gained the experience of watching every promise we made crumble while he used our sacred wishes for another woman. I gained the knowledge of what it feels like to be thrown away, to be forced from my own home while another woman destroys my possessions and takes my place."
Tears streamed down my face as I continued, unable to stop the torrent of pain. "So please, Father, Ethan—spare me your 'I told you so.' I don't need your judgment. I need..."
My voice broke completely. What did I need? Safety? Revenge? A time machine?
The silence that followed was deafening. Then, to my shock, my father reached across the table and gently covered my trembling hand with his.
"You need your family," he said, his voice suddenly soft. "And we are here."
Ethan's face had transformed, anger replacing disapproval—not at me, I realized, but on my behalf.
"He hurt you?" my brother asked, voice dangerously low.
I nodded, too exhausted to explain the complexity of emotional abuse punctuated by physical carelessness.
My father's hand tightened over mine. "Then he will pay."
---
The next morning found me sitting in the corner of my father's office at Morgan Investments, the Manhattan skyline spread before the floor-to-ceiling windows. I hadn't been invited to the emergency board meeting, but my father had insisted I attend.
"You need to see this," was all he'd said.
The board members filed in, nodding respectfully to my father and casting curious glances my way. I recognized most of them—powerful men and women who'd known me since childhood.
"Gentlemen, ladies," my father began once everyone was seated. "I've called this meeting to announce an immediate change in our investment strategy. Effective immediately, Morgan Investments is withdrawing all funding from Caldwell Technologies."
My heart pounded against my ribs. Caldwell Tech was James's startup—his dream, his future. And Morgan Investments was its largest backer.
"Richard," one board member began cautiously, "Caldwell Tech is projected to triple its valuation this quarter. This seems... precipitous."
My father's expression remained impassive. "My daughter's husband—soon to be ex-husband—is James Caldwell."
A ripple of understanding moved through the room.
"He has proven himself unworthy of both my daughter and my capital," my father continued, his voice like steel. "No man who disrespects my daughter deserves my money."
I sat perfectly still, watching as with a few words, my father dismantled the financial foundation of James's dreams. I should have felt vindicated. Instead, I felt hollow—until my father's next words.
"Isabella will be taking point on restructuring our portfolio to accommodate this change. She'll be joining the firm as Managing Director of Special Projects, effective immediately."
All eyes turned to me. My father hadn't mentioned this part of his plan.
"Unless," he added, looking directly at me for the first time, "you object?"
I straightened in my chair, feeling something new unfurl inside me—not revenge, but purpose. James had taken my home, my marriage, my dignity. But he couldn't take my future.
"I have no objections," I said clearly. "It's time I reclaimed my place."
As the meeting continued around me, I imagined James's face when he realized what had happened—when he understood exactly who he had betrayed. The thought didn't bring me joy, but it did bring something else—a cold, clear certainty that while he had destroyed our past, I would control my future.
And Rachel? Rachel had no idea what was coming.
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