
Ex-Husband's Empire Crash
Chapter 1
I stared at my phone, coffee forgotten beside my half-eaten avocado toast. My thumb froze mid-scroll as the Instagram video played on repeat. There was Cameron—my husband of three years—laughing as he casually took the water bottle from his personal trainer Madison Rivers, pressing his lips where hers had just been. The morning light streaming through our penthouse windows suddenly felt cold against my skin.
Three years. Three years of separate glasses, separate utensils, separate everything. Three years of watching him wipe down doorknobs after I touched them. Three years of believing my husband suffered from severe germaphobia.
I replayed the video, searching for some explanation. Maybe it wasn't his bottle. Maybe I was seeing things. But no—there was Cameron, his perfect white teeth flashing as he tilted his head back, Adam's apple bobbing as he drank deeply from Madison's bottle before handing it back with a lingering touch of their fingers.
Something inside me cracked. Not dramatically, not all at once, but like ice forming a spiderweb of fractures before the final break.
I set my phone down with trembling hands and stared out at the Manhattan skyline. The city I'd called home since our wedding day suddenly felt foreign, as if I were seeing it through someone else's eyes. Perhaps I was. Perhaps I'd never truly seen anything clearly when it came to Cameron.
---
I waited for him in our dining room that evening, the floor-to-ceiling windows reflecting twin images of me in my silk blouse and tailored pants. I'd dressed carefully, armor against what was coming. The sunset painted Manhattan in gold and shadow, but inside our glass fortress, I felt only cold.
When Cameron walked in, loosening his tie with practiced elegance, he didn't immediately notice my stillness. He poured himself a scotch, the amber liquid catching the light.
"I saw something interesting today," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
He glanced up, one eyebrow raised. "Oh?"
I slid my phone across the glass table. The video played silently between us.
Something flickered across his face—surprise, then irritation, then nothing at all. That nothing terrified me more than any anger could have.
"You've never once," I whispered, tears threatening, "in three years, shared a glass with me. You wipe down doorknobs. You sleep facing away. You—" My voice broke. "You told me it was germaphobia."
Cameron set down his glass with deliberate care. "And you believed me."
Four words. Four simple words that demolished everything.
"Why?" The question tore from my throat. "Why marry me if you found me so... repulsive?"
He sighed, as if my question was tedious, an inconvenience in his otherwise perfect day. "Don't be dramatic, Sophia. It was never about you personally."
"Then what was it about?" I demanded, tears now flowing freely.
"What do you think?" He gestured around our penthouse. "The Chen family fortune. Your father's connections. The dowry." He shrugged. "Business."
I stared at him, this stranger I'd shared a home with, this man I'd bent myself into impossible shapes to accommodate. "You never loved me."
It wasn't a question.
"Love is a luxury, Sophia." Cameron's voice was almost gentle, which somehow made it worse. "Some of us can't afford to indulge in it."
I sat there, feeling the final pieces of my marriage—my life—crumble around me. The worst part wasn't the betrayal. It was the realization that I'd betrayed myself by ignoring every sign, by making excuses for his coldness, by believing I wasn't worthy of more.
---
The next morning, I sat across from Harper Liu in her sleek office overlooking Central Park. Sunlight glinted off her glasses as she slid the divorce papers toward me.
"Are you certain about this, Sophia?" she asked, her voice kind but professional.
I nodded, pen already in hand. My signature flowed across the page with surprising steadiness.
"What about your personal belongings?" Harper asked.
"I took what matters." Just a suitcase of clothes, my grandmother's jade pendant, and my dignity—what was left of it.
Later, I stood outside the study door in the penthouse for the last time. I could hear Cameron on the phone, his voice animated as he discussed some deal. I slipped the divorce notice under his door and watched the paper disappear into the shadow beneath.
As I turned to leave, I heard his voice falter mid-sentence. The paper had been seen.
I didn't wait to hear more. Some endings don't need witnesses.
As the elevator doors closed on my old life, I pressed my forehead against the cool metal and whispered to myself, "What happens when a woman stops accommodating and starts demanding?"
I was about to find out.
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