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He Served Divorce Papers at Graduation, I Cut Off His Diamond Supply Novel Cover

He Served Divorce Papers at Graduation, I Cut Off His Diamond Supply

"Sign the papers, Clara, because Chloe is pregnant and deserves a real family." The microphone feedback whines through the university stadium stadium, vibrating right against my ribs. Three thousand graduating students go completely dead silent. The heavy velvet of my valedictorian gown sticks to my sweating back. My husband of three years, Julian, stands right in the middle of the stage. He shoves a manila envelope onto the wooden podium, blocking my notes. I spent the last thirty-six months scrubbing his hardwood floors on my hands and knees. I ironed his custom suits while he built his miserable little jewelry startup. I ate instant ramen so he could afford his first office lease. Now, he turns his back to me, facing the front row of the audience. Chloe, my former roommate, sits there with a smug smile painted across her glossed lips. Julian drops to one knee on the astroturf. He pulls a black velvet box from his tailored jacket pocket. The stadium lights catch the center stone as he snaps the lid open. A chorus of gasps ripples through the crowd of students and parents. It is a two-carat, princess-cut diamond set in platinum. "Chloe, you are my true muse, will you marry me?" his voice echoes over the PA system. My chest tightens, the air suddenly thick with the smell of cheap champagne and ozone. I grip the edges of the podium until the wood splinters bite into my skin. Julian thinks that two-carat stone is the ultimate flex. He bought it from the retail arm of the Vancour Diamond Syndicate. He bragged about spending his entire quarterly bonus on it. What Julian absolutely does not know is the name printed on his vendor contract. I am Clara Vancour. The sole heir to the global Vancour Syndicate. That specific ring he is holding? It is categorized in my family’s catalog as a scrap-tier industrial castoff. I gave up my penthouse, my black cards, and my bodyguard detail to prove I could live an ordinary life with the man I loved. I hid my bloodline to make him feel like a king. A cold, metallic calm washes over the back of my neck. I reach into my pocket and pull out a solid gold Vancour executive pen. I uncap it with a sharp click that reverberates through the microphone. I flip the divorce papers to the last page and drag my signature across the dotted line. No tears, no screaming, just the scratch of the nib tearing into the cheap paper. I step out from behind the podium, the heavy gown dragging across the stage. I walk right up behind Julian’s kneeling form. He looks over his shoulder, annoyance flashing in his narrow eyes. I let the signed divorce decree flutter down, landing perfectly over the open velvet ring box. "Keep the scrap metal," I say, my voice steady. Then, I drop my grandfather's black platinum business card right onto his pristine white shoes. Julian’s eyes dart down to the embossed gold crest on the card. His jaw goes completely slack.
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Chapter 1

"Class of two thousand—"

"Stop talking, Clara."

Julian’s voice sliced through the auditorium speakers. He didn't wait for permission. He bypassed the dean, ignored the security guard, and marched straight up the wooden stairs to the stage.

I lowered the microphone. "Julian? What are you doing?"

He reached the podium and slammed a thick stack of stapled papers directly over my speech notes. The heavy thud echoed through the silent hall.

"Sign them," he ordered.

I stared at the bold, capitalized letters glaring back at me. *Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.*

My stomach cramped. A violent, sharp twist seized my gut, making the stage lights blur for a fraction of a second.

"Are you insane?" I whispered, keeping my voice away from the mic. "We are in the middle of my graduation ceremony. There are two thousand people out there."

"I don't care if the whole city is watching," Julian sneered. He leaned closer, invading my space. "I am not spending another minute pretending I want to be your husband."

"You couldn't wait until tonight? Until we were in private?"

"Private?" He let out a harsh, mocking laugh. "You love an audience, Clara. You love standing up here, playing the perfect valedictorian. I figured I'd give them a real show."

"Please," I said, my voice trembling. "Just take these back. We can talk about this at the apartment."

"There is no 'we'. And I'm never stepping foot in that apartment again."

He pulled a gold fountain pen from his breast pocket and tossed it onto the wood. It clattered against the metal stand.

"Sign the damn papers, Clara."

I curled my fingers inward. My nails dug into my palms. I pressed harder, feeling the sharp sting as the tips broke through the skin. A layer of cold sweat broke out across the back of my neck.

"You're doing this just to humiliate me," I said.

"I'm doing this to free myself."

I reached for the pen. My hand hovered over the gold casing.

Before my fingers could even brush the metal, Julian turned his back. He didn't wait for my signature. He didn't even watch me pick up the pen.

He walked away, descending the center stairs with quick, purposeful strides.

I stood frozen at the podium.

He stopped at the first row of seats. Right in front of Chloe.

"Chloe," Julian said, his voice carrying easily in the dead silent room.

She stood up. She smoothed the front of her floral dress, her eyes wide. "Julian? What is happening?"

"I'm fixing my life," he said.

He dropped to one knee.

A collective gasp ripped through the crowd. Murmurs exploded from the bleachers. Flashbulbs went off.

"Julian, get up," Chloe whispered, though she didn't step back. She stepped closer to him.

"No," he declared, projecting his voice toward the audience. "I spent three years tied to a woman who only cared about her own ambition. I was miserable. But you... you stayed by my side. You showed me what real loyalty looks like."

"People are staring," she said, a faint smile playing on her lips.

"Let them stare."

Julian reached into his jacket and pulled out a square velvet box. He flipped it open. A diamond ring caught the harsh glare of the stage lights.

"Chloe Adams, you are the only woman I have ever truly loved. Will you marry me?"

Chloe covered her mouth with both hands. "Oh my god."

"Say yes," he urged.

"Yes! Yes, Julian, of course I will!"

He stood up and grabbed her waist, pulling her into a deep kiss.

The auditorium erupted. Some students cheered. Parents gasped. The faculty sat in stunned silence.

I stood at the podium, watching my husband kiss my best friend.

I bit my lower lip. My teeth sank into the tender flesh. I bit down until a sharp pain flared, followed instantly by a rusty, metallic flavor flooding my tongue. Blood.

I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand.

"Miss Vancour," the dean whispered from his seat behind me. "Perhaps we should close the curtains."

"No," I said.

I grabbed the gold pen. I flipped past the pages of legal jargon, finding the final sheet.

*Clara Vancour.*

I pressed the nib to the paper and dragged it across the dotted line. The ink stained the page, bold and final.

I dropped the pen. It rolled off the podium and hit the floor.

I gathered the thick stack of papers in my hands. The edges were sharp against my bruised palms.

I walked down the stairs. My graduation gown swept against the wooden steps. Each footfall felt heavier than the last.

Julian pulled away from Chloe. He slipped the ring onto her finger.

"Julian," I called out.

He turned around. A smug, victorious grin stretched across his face. He looked at me like I was trash he had finally taken to the curb.

"Did you sign it?" he asked, holding out his hand.

I didn't hand it to him.

I raised the stack of papers and threw them directly at his face.

The staple ripped. The pages separated mid-air. A flurry of white sheets slapped against his cheeks, his chest, and his shoulders before fluttering down to coat the floor around his shoes.

"Consider it signed," I said.

Chloe gasped, shrinking behind Julian's arm. "Clara, are you crazy?"

"Shut up, Chloe," I snapped. "You can have my leftovers."

Julian's grin vanished. His face flushed a dark, angry crimson. He stared at the scattered documents covering his expensive leather shoes.

He snapped his gaze up to me, his fists clenching at his sides.

"You crazy bitch—" he started, taking a heavy step forward, crushing the divorce decree beneath his heel. He raised a finger, ready to scream.

I didn't flinch. I didn't back away.

I spun on my heel, marched straight back up the wooden stairs, and grabbed the microphone from the stand.

I stared down at him from the stage.

"W—"

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