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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 2

I shoved three faded T-shirts into my duffel bag and jerked the zipper shut. The metal teeth jammed halfway. I yanked the fabric free, forcing the zipper all the way to the end. That was it. Everything I owned fit into one battered canvas bag.

The front door slammed open. It hit the drywall with a hollow crack.

Julian strode into the tiny living room. He didn't bother knocking. He stopped at the edge of the frayed rug, glaring at my packed bag.

"Leaving so soon?" he asked.

"I signed your papers," I said, grabbing the handles of my duffel. "We have nothing left to discuss."

Julian reached inside his tailored jacket. He pulled out a slip of paper and flicked his wrist. The paper fluttered through the air and landed face-up on the scratched coffee table.

Fifty thousand dollars.

"Take it," he commanded.

I stared at the check. I didn't reach for it.

"What is this, Julian?"

"Severance," he sneered. "Compensation. Whatever you want to call it. It’s enough to keep you off the streets for a few months."

"I don't want your money."

"Don't play the martyr, Clara. You have nothing. You came into this marriage with nothing, and you're leaving with exactly that."

He crossed his arms, his expensive watch catching the dim light from the overhead bulb.

"Fifty grand is generous," he added. "Consider it payment for three years of wasting my time."

I let go of my bag. It hit the linoleum floor with a dull thud.

A laugh bubbled up my throat. It wasn't a sob. It wasn't a scream. It was a sharp, genuine chuckle that echoed off the peeling wallpaper.

Julian frowned. His posture stiffened. "What is so funny?"

"You," I said. "You actually think you can buy a clean conscience."

"I don't need a clean conscience," he snapped. "I need you gone. I need a clean break."

"A clean break? You ambushed me at graduation. You made a spectacle out of our divorce."

"You forced my hand."

"I did nothing but support you."

"You suffocated me!" Julian shouted, throwing his hands up. "You mapped out our entire lives. You scheduled my study hours, my job interviews, my meals. I was living with a warden, not a wife."

"I kept us afloat," I argued. "I worked double shifts at the diner so you could finish your degree without taking out loans."

"And you never let me forget it."

"Because you never appreciated it."

He pointed a finger at my chest. "Chloe appreciates me. She doesn't treat me like a project to be managed."

"Chloe treats you like a walking wallet," I shot back. "She always has."

Julian scoffed, shaking his head. "You're just jealous. You can't stand the fact that someone else makes me happy."

"I don't care about your happiness anymore."

"Then take the damn check!"

"No."

"Are you really this stupid?" He took a step forward, his voice rising. "You have no job. You have no family to run back to. You are going to starve."

"I survived before I met you," I told him. "I'll survive after."

I walked past him toward the tiny kitchenette. The space was so narrow my shoulder brushed the refrigerator door.

Julian trailed right behind me. "You always do this. You always have to be the stubborn one. Just take the money and disappear."

I stopped at the sink. The faucet dripped, leaving a rust stain near the drain.

"Keep your money," I said, turning to face him. "Use it to buy Chloe a better wedding dress. That floral monstrosity she wore today was embarrassing."

"Leave Chloe out of this!"

"You proposed to her in front of my graduating class. She's already in this."

I reached out and flicked the switch on the wall.

The garbage disposal roared to life. The motor vibrated through the cheap countertops, drowning out the traffic noise from the street below.

Julian stepped closer, raising his voice over the mechanical growl. "Are you listening to me?"

I raised my left hand.

The plain metal band rested on my ring finger. It wasn't gold. It wasn't even silver. It was a cheap alloy that had oxidized over the past three years, leaving a faint green mark around my skin.

"You bought this at a pawn shop," I shouted over the noise.

"We were broke students!"

"You were cheap. You've always been cheap."

I pinched the metal between my thumb and index finger. I slid it off.

"Clara," Julian warned, his face flushing red. "Don't be dramatic."

I held the ring over the open drain.

"I'm not being dramatic," I yelled. "I'm taking out the trash."

I opened my fingers.

The ring dropped into the dark hole.

Instantly, a violent, screeching grind tore through the kitchen. The metal blades caught the cheap alloy, chewing it to pieces. The horrific crunching sound filled the entire apartment, vibrating deep in my chest.

Julian flinched, covering his ears. "Turn that off!"

I didn't touch the switch. I stood there, listening to the violent destruction of my marriage.

Hearing the screeching metal in the disposal, my tense shoulders dropped heavily. The rigid knot in my spine melted away. My breathing shifted from short gasps to a smooth exhale of cold air.

The grinding noise faded into a dull hum. The ring was gone. Reduced to metal dust in the pipes.

I flipped the switch down. Silence crashed back into the room.

"You're insane," Julian muttered, backing away from the sink. He rubbed his temples.

"I'm free," I corrected him.

I walked back to the living room and picked up my duffel bag. I slung the canvas strap over my shoulder.

"You're going to regret this," Julian said, his voice dropping to a low threat. "When you're sleeping on a park bench, don't come begging to me."

"I'd rather sleep on concrete than spend another night next to you."

"Fine," he spat. He pointed at the check still resting on the table. "I'm leaving that there. When you finally come to your senses, cash it."

"Take it with you."

"I don't take things back."

"Then I'll leave it for the landlord."

Julian shook his head, a look of utter disgust twisting his features. "You are pathetic."

I turned toward the exit.

Before I could take a single step, a rhythmic thudding echoed from the hallway. Not one person. Several.

The heavy, synchronized footfalls of dress shoes stopped right outside my unit.

Julian glanced over his shoulder. "Who is that?"

I tightened my grip on the canvas straps. I didn't answer. I didn't know the answer.

The battered apartment door swung wide open, hitting the wall for the second time today.

Eight men marched into the cramped space. They wore matching black suits, dark ties, and earpieces. They didn't look at Julian. They ignored the peeling paint and the stained carpet.

They parted down the middle, forming two perfect lines that stretched from the threshold to the hallway.

A heavy silence blanketed the room.

Someone else was coming.

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