
Divorce: A Sweet Revenge
Divorce: A Sweet Revenge Chapter 1
The sound of my front door crashing open echoed through the penthouse like a gunshot. I didn't flinch as I continued arranging the delicate white orchids in the crystal vase, their fragility a stark contrast to the storm brewing in my living room.
"Well, well... look who's still playing house."
Mercy Ray's voice dripped with venom as she strode into my Manhattan penthouse uninvited, her designer heels clicking against the marble floor with deliberate force. Three years. Three years I'd endured being treated as a placeholder, a substitute for this woman who'd finally returned from Paris.
I carefully positioned another stem before turning to face her. "Mercy. What an unexpected surprise."
She looked exactly as I remembered—perhaps even more beautiful after her time abroad. Her honey-blonde hair fell in perfect waves past her shoulders, and her emerald dress hugged every curve with expensive precision. But it was the triumphant gleam in her eyes that caught my attention.
"Surprise?" She laughed, the sound like breaking glass. "Oh, darling Legacy. I'm sure it's a surprise. But not nearly as surprising as how long you've managed to cling to my life."
I set down the orchids and wiped my hands on a towel, maintaining the composure I'd perfected over three years of marriage to a man who'd never truly seen me. "I don't understand what you mean."
"Don't play dumb." Mercy's perfectly manicured finger jabbed toward the doorway where Tyson stood. "It's over. Your little charade as Mrs. Ellis is finally finished."
My husband—soon to be ex-husband—leaned against the doorframe with casual indifference, divorce papers already in hand. The sunlight streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows highlighted the cold detachment in his eyes.
"Legacy," he said, his voice carrying the same tone he might use to dismiss a subordinate, "we need to talk."
"I think Mercy just said everything that needs saying," I replied, moving toward the sofa with deliberate calm.
Tyson pushed away from the doorframe and approached, placing the documents on the glass coffee table with a decisive snap. "I've had my lawyer draw up divorce papers. Very generous terms, considering."
I glanced at the papers but didn't touch them. "Generous?"
"A mansion in the Hamptons and five million dollars." He said it like he was bestowing a great favor. "More than enough for someone who's been playing house for three years."
Mercy wandered around my living room, trailing her fingers over my antique collection with barely concealed contempt. "God, these reproductions are so... cheap," she said, picking up a Ming dynasty vase and examining it with theatrical disdain. "You'd think if she was going to pretend to be wealthy, she'd at least buy better props."
"Those are authentic pieces," I said quietly.
Tyson snorted. "Right. Like you'd know the difference between real antiques and flea market junk."
I met his gaze steadily. "And what about you, Tyson? What do you know about authentic value?"
Something flickered in his eyes—perhaps the first genuine emotion I'd seen from him all day—but it vanished quickly. "Sign the papers, Legacy. Let's not make this harder than it needs to be."
Mercy settled onto my sofa like she already owned it. "He's right. It's time to move on... or rather, to move out." Her smile was predatory. "Back to whatever hole you crawled out of before Tyson found you."
I picked up the pen and looked at the divorce agreement one last time. Three years of marriage reduced to legal terminology and property division. Three years of being someone's second choice, their substitute wife.
"Fine," I said simply.
With steady hands, I signed my name on each marked line. No tears. No protests. Just the scratch of pen against paper as I officially ended my marriage to a man who'd never truly known me.
"That's... that's it?" Mercy looked disappointed by my lack of resistance.
"What did you expect?" I asked, setting down the pen. "Tears? Begging?"
Tyson at least had the decency to look momentarily confused. "I thought..."
"You thought wrong," I said, already moving toward the bedroom to pack my essentials.
I carefully selected a few items from my closet—designer pieces that would travel well—and then returned to the living room for my personal treasures.
"These worthless pieces?" Tyson scoffed as I collected several of my "cheap reproductions."
"They have sentimental value," I replied, wrapping a small jade figurine in silk.
As I packed, I pulled out my phone and typed a quick message to Emma: "Phase One initiated."
"Sentimental value," Tyson repeated with a dismissive laugh. "That's exactly what I've been telling you, Legacy. This marriage was never real. It was just... playing house."
I slipped my phone back into my pocket and looked at him one last time. "You're right about one thing, Tyson. We were playing house."
But as I walked toward the door with my carefully selected belongings, I wondered if he'd ever realize that I'd been playing in a mansion far more valuable than anything he could imagine.
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