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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 3

A silver-haired man stepped through the gap between the suited guards. He held a silver pocket watch in one hand and adjusted his tailored black vest with the other.

"Miss Vancour," he said, his voice a smooth, commanding baritone. "We are running three minutes behind schedule."

Julian dropped his arms. He stared at the older man, then shifted his gaze to the guards lining the cramped hallway.

"Who the hell are you?" Julian demanded. "Are you a collection agency?"

The silver-haired man didn't acknowledge him. He kept his eyes entirely fixed on me.

"The vehicle is ready, ma'am," he added softly.

"Thank you, Elias," I replied.

I stepped forward, my canvas sneakers squeaking slightly against the worn linoleum.

Julian blocked my path. "Clara, what is going on? Who are these people?"

"Move, Julian."

"Not until you explain this!" he shouted, pointing a finger at Elias. "You don't know anyone like this. You flip burgers at a diner!"

"I said move."

I didn't raise my voice. I didn't need to. Two of the guards stepped forward, grabbing Julian by the shoulders. They shoved him hard against the drywall. He grunted, his expensive jacket bunching up around his neck.

"Hey! Get your hands off me!" Julian thrashed, but the men held him securely pinned against the peeling wallpaper.

I walked past him, ignoring his frantic struggling.

"Clara!" he yelled down the hall as I reached the stairs. "You can't just walk out like this!"

I didn't look back.

I pushed through the rusted front doors of the apartment building and stepped onto the cracked sidewalk. A midnight-black Maybach idled at the curb. It looked like a spaceship parked in a junkyard.

Elias bypassed me and opened the rear door.

I slid into the back. The heavy door shut with a solid, isolating thud, instantly cutting off the sirens and shouting from the street.

I leaned back. The cold, hard leather of the seat pressed firmly against my spine. It grounded me. I ran my thumb over my knuckles. The skin felt rough, covered in tiny, abrasive calluses. Three years of scrubbing cheap countertops with bleach. Three years of washing Julian's grease-stained shirts by hand because we couldn't afford the laundromat.

I rubbed the rough patches, pressing hard enough to sting. The last lingering traces of warmth drained from my eyes.

Elias settled into the front passenger seat. He turned around and handed a thick leather folder over the center console.

"The global rough diamond monopoly contract," Elias said. "The board finalized the terms this morning."

I took the folder. "Did the European suppliers try to negotiate the margin?"

"They attempted to," Elias replied, a faint smirk touching his lips. "We reminded them that the Vancour family controls the shipping routes. They folded within the hour."

"Good."

I looked down at my feet. The faded white canvas shoes were stained with old coffee and grease. I kicked them off. They tumbled onto the pristine floor mats, looking exactly like the trash they were.

Elias reached down and produced a black velvet box. He popped the lid.

Inside rested a pair of stilettos. They were heavily encrusted with raw diamonds, catching the ambient light and throwing sharp prisms across the dark interior.

I slipped my bare feet into the shoes. The fit was flawless.

"We need your authorization to proceed with the acquisition," Elias prompted, tapping the folder in my lap.

I opened the leather cover. Pages of dense legal text stared back at me. I flipped directly to the final page.

*Highest Decision-Maker: Clara Vancour.*

Elias offered a heavy fountain pen. The gold casing bore the intricate Vancour family crest—a shield wrapped in thorned vines.

I gripped the pen. The metal felt cool and familiar against my fingers. I dragged the nib across the dotted line, leaving a thick, black signature.

"Done," I said, handing the folder and the pen back to him.

"Welcome back to the seat, Miss Vancour. Your father would be pleased."

"My father would have never let me play house with a parasite for three years," I corrected.

"A temporary lapse in judgment," Elias offered smoothly. "We all have them."

"It won't happen again."

"Where to, ma'am?" the driver asked from the front seat.

"Vancour Tower," I instructed. "I have a company to run."

Elias pressed a button on the armrest. A sleek, flat-screen monitor slid out from the back of the front seat.

"Before we arrive, there is one minor issue you should be aware of," Elias said.

The screen flickered to life. A local financial news channel played on mute. The chyron at the bottom read: *Rising Star in Tech Secures Massive Deal.*

I stared at the screen.

Julian sat in a plush studio chair. He wore a brand-new suit, grinning broadly at the female anchor.

"Volume up," I ordered.

The audio filled the cabin.

"—an incredible milestone for my firm," Julian was saying, leaning forward with feigned humility. "We have worked tirelessly to position ourselves as the premier choice in the market."

"And rumor has it," the anchor chimed in, "you are about to lock down the exclusive procurement rights for the Vancour Group. Is that true, Julian?"

Julian chuckled. He adjusted his cuffs, looking straight into the camera.

"I prefer to let the ink dry before making official announcements," he lied smoothly. "But I have established a very close, personal understanding with the Vancour executives. The procurement contract is essentially a done deal. We are just waiting on the final paperwork."

"Astounding," the anchor praised. "To secure a deal with the Vancour empire so early in your career is unheard of."

"It just takes the right connections," Julian boasted. "And a relentless drive for success. Sometimes you have to cut away the dead weight holding you back to finally reach the top."

Elias paused the broadcast. The screen froze on Julian. His chin tilted up, his eyes gleaming with unearned arrogance.

"He filmed this segment yesterday afternoon," Elias noted. "His firm is already leveraging the anticipated Vancour contract to attract new investors."

I stared at Julian's smug profile. A cold, sharp smile touched my lips.

"He thinks he has the procurement rights," I murmured.

"The previous executive VP drafted a preliminary agreement with him," Elias explained. "It requires your final approval to execute."

I crossed my legs, the light flashing off the diamonds on my shoes.

"Cancel his preliminary agreement," I commanded.

"Immediately, ma'am. Should I notify his firm?"

"No," I said, keeping my eyes locked on Julian's frozen, victorious expression. "Let him find out when he shows up to sign the final papers."

Elias nodded. "And the executive VP who drafted the deal?"

"Fire him. Anyone who thinks Julian is worth doing business with has no place in my company."

"Understood."

I leaned forward and tapped the glass of the monitor, right over Julian's smiling face.

"He wanted a clean break," I whispered to the empty car. "Let's see how clean it stays when I break him."

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