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Divorcing My Cheating Billionaire Husband Novel Cover

Divorcing My Cheating Billionaire Husband

I pushed open the door without knocking—a privilege earned through seven years of marriage and partnership. The gift box slipped from my fingers. David was bent over his desk, his shirt unbuttoned, his hands gripping the waist of a young woman whose blonde hair spilled across the very papers I'd helped him organize last week. Sophie—his secretary, barely twenty-five, her skirt hiked up around her hips as she arched against him with a breathless moan. The sound that escaped my throat was somewhere between a gasp and a sob.
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Chapter 2

Sleep was a stranger that night. I lay in our king-sized bed—the bed where David and I had once whispered dreams and plans into the darkness—staring at the ceiling as numbers swirled through my mind like vultures.

Fifty-fifty split of assets. That's what California law promised in a divorce. But custody? Custody was different. Custody went to whoever could provide the most stable environment for the child.

I rolled over, clutching David's pillow to my chest before the scent of his cologne made me sick. The digital clock glowed 3:47 AM in accusatory red numbers.

Who had the stable income? David.

Who had the established career? David.

Who had spent the last seven years out of the workforce, with no recent references, no current skills, no independent financial history? Me.

The California Family Code section 3040 echoed in my memory from a documentary I'd half-watched months ago. The court's primary concern was the best interest of the child, which included the parent's ability to provide a stable home environment. Financial stability ranked high on that list.

I sat up, my heart hammering against my ribs. In the darkness, I could almost see Leo's face, confused and hurt, asking why Mommy couldn't live with him anymore. Why Daddy got to keep him while Mommy had to visit on weekends like some distant relative.

The injustice of it burned in my throat. I was the one who woke up with him during nightmares. I was the one who knew he liked his sandwiches cut diagonally and that he needed his stuffed elephant to fall asleep. I was the one who'd sacrificed everything to be present for every scraped knee, every school play, every bedtime story.

But love didn't pay rent. Love didn't impress family court judges.

By 5 AM, I'd calculated and recalculated our assets until my head pounded. The house was worth $1.2 million, but half of that wouldn't be enough to establish the kind of stability a court would want to see. David's business was valued at nearly $3 million, but proving my contribution to its success would be a battle. And even if I won half of everything, I'd still need to demonstrate earning potential, career prospects, the ability to maintain Leo's current lifestyle.

Seven years. Seven years I'd been out of the workforce. Seven years of professional obsolescence.

The morning light filtering through our bedroom curtains felt like judgment.

I stumbled to the kitchen, my hands shaking as I tried to make coffee. The familiar routine felt foreign now, like I was playing house in someone else's life. Every surface held memories—the granite countertops we'd chosen together, the breakfast bar where Leo did his homework while I cooked dinner, the refrigerator covered with his artwork and David's business achievements.

Achievements I'd helped him earn.

My phone sat on the counter like an accusation. I'd been staring at it for an hour, Rachel's number burned into my memory, before I finally found the courage to dial.

"Emma?" Rachel's voice was thick with sleep, but she snapped to attention immediately. "It's seven in the morning. What's wrong?"

The words tumbled out in a broken stream—David, Sophie, the office, the cruel laughter, the dismissive cruelty of being called 'old wood.' I told her about the financial trap I'd discovered, about the custody laws that could steal my son away from me.

Rachel's silence stretched so long I thought the call had dropped.

"That bastard," she finally whispered, her voice vibrating with fury. "That absolute bastard. Emma, I am so sorry. I'm so fucking sorry."

Hearing someone else's anger on my behalf broke something loose in my chest. The tears came then, great heaving sobs that I'd been holding back since yesterday.

"I don't know what to do," I gasped between sobs. "I can't lose Leo. I can't let David win. But I don't have anything, Rachel. I gave up everything for him, and now I have nothing."

"Stop." Rachel's voice cut through my spiral with sharp authority. "Stop right there. You're not nothing, and you're not helpless. You're one of the smartest women I know, and you've been playing house with a man who doesn't deserve to breathe the same air as you."

I wiped my nose with a dish towel, trying to steady my breathing.

"Listen to me carefully," Rachel continued. "I'm going to give you a name. Matthew Riley. He's a lawyer—young, maybe early thirties, but he's brilliant. He specializes in exactly this kind of case. Housewives getting screwed over by cheating husbands."

"Rachel, I can't afford—"

"He works on contingency for cases like yours. His mother..." Rachel paused, choosing her words carefully. "His mother went through something similar when he was a teenager. Her husband left her for a younger woman, and she got destroyed in the divorce. She couldn't handle it. She... she didn't make it through."

The weight of that settled over me like a shroud.

"Matthew became a lawyer specifically to prevent that from happening to other women. He's not in it for the money, Emma. He's in it for justice. And he's good—really good. I've seen him work."

I gripped the phone tighter. "How do you know him?"

"My firm has worked with him on a few cases. Trust me when I say he will fight for you like his life depends on it. Because in a way, it does."

Rachel gave me his number, making me repeat it back twice to ensure I had it right. After we hung up, I stared at the digits scrawled on the back of an envelope, my lifeline written in smudged blue ink.

Two days passed before I could bring myself to dial.

Two days of rehearsing conversations in my head, of starting to call and hanging up before it could ring. Two days of David coming home late with Sophie's perfume still clinging to his clothes, acting like nothing had changed, like I hadn't caught them destroying our marriage.

Two days of watching Leo at breakfast, memorizing the way he hummed while eating cereal, terrified it might be taken away from me.

On Thursday morning, after David left for work with barely a glance in my direction, I finally dialed Matthew Riley's number.

My hands trembled as the phone rang once, twice—

"Riley Law Office, this is Matthew."

The voice was younger than I'd expected, warm but professional. I opened my mouth and found I couldn't speak.

"Hello? Is anyone there?"

"I..." My voice cracked. I cleared my throat and tried again. "My name is Emma Thompson. Rachel Lane gave me your number. I think... I think I need help."

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