
Ex-Husband's Empire Crash
Chapter 3
Monday morning arrived with a clarity I hadn't felt in weeks. I stood before the mirror in my small studio apartment, adjusting a charcoal pencil skirt I'd dug out from the back of my suitcase. The woman staring back at me looked both familiar and strange—thinner, with shadows under her eyes, but with something new burning in them. Determination, perhaps. Or rage.
I arrived at Sterling Investments at 7:45 AM, my heart hammering against my ribs as the elevator climbed to the thirty-eighth floor. The glass doors opened to reveal a sleek reception area with Manhattan sprawled beyond floor-to-ceiling windows.
"Sophia Chen for Michael Sterling," I told the receptionist, my voice steadier than I felt.
Michael was waiting in the conference room, surrounded by spreadsheets and digital displays. He nodded curtly when I entered, gesturing to an empty chair without breaking his conversation with a silver-haired man I recognized as board member Thomas Holloway.
"The Vertex Retail portfolio," Michael was saying. "It's a mess, but there might be something salvageable."
Thomas snorted. "It's a dying chain in a dying industry. I say we pass."
My eyes caught on the financial statements projected on the wall. Without thinking, I spoke up. "The flagship locations are actually undervalued."
The room fell silent. Six pairs of eyes turned to me.
"I'm sorry?" Thomas's tone suggested I'd committed a cardinal sin.
I swallowed hard but stood my ground. "The real estate alone in the Chicago and Boston locations exceeds their current valuation by at least 30%. And their e-commerce platform has solid architecture—it's their inventory management that's failing them."
I stepped forward, grabbing a tablet from the table. My fingers flew across the screen, pulling up numbers, creating a quick model. Three years away from finance, but it was coming back like muscle memory.
"Look here," I said, projecting my work onto the main screen. "If you segment their locations, restructure their debt, and implement a drop-shipping model for their online division, you could turn a $50 million loss into a $30 million gain within eighteen months."
The silence that followed was deafening. Thomas Holloway's mouth had fallen slightly open. Michael's expression remained unreadable, but I caught a flicker of something in his eyes. Approval? Surprise?
"That's... an interesting approach," he finally said. "Elaborate."
For the next forty minutes, I dissected Vertex's balance sheet, pointing out hidden assets, suggesting creative financing options, and outlining a complete turnaround strategy. Words flowed from me like water breaking through a dam—powerful, unstoppable. This was who I had been before Cameron. This was who I could be again.
When I finished, the room remained quiet for several seconds.
"Well," Thomas said finally, "I think we've found our retail specialist." He nodded at me with newfound respect before gathering his papers.
As the board members filed out, Michael lingered behind. "Not bad for someone who's been 'out of the game.'"
I allowed myself a small smile. "I've been underestimated before."
"Not by me," he replied. "Not anymore."
---
That evening, I collapsed onto my sofa, exhaustion and exhilaration battling within me. My phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number.
"I saw your write-up on Vertex—brilliant. Don't let them define you."
I frowned, typing back: "Who is this?"
"David Sterling. Michael's brother. I work in the creative division."
I vaguely remembered Michael mentioning a brother who handled the firm's architectural and design projects.
"Thank you," I replied simply, unsure what else to say. It had been so long since I'd received genuine kindness without an agenda that I hardly recognized it.
Three dots appeared, disappeared, then reappeared.
"Would you like to get coffee sometime? No pressure. Just thought you might want a friendly face in the Sterling jungle."
I stared at the message, my thumb hovering over the screen. Part of me wanted to decline, to wrap myself in solitude and focus solely on rebuilding my career. But another part—a part I thought had died during those three cold years with Cameron—whispered that perhaps not all connections were transactions.
Before I could reply, my phone pinged with a notification. A viral video was trending across social media platforms—footage from Cameron and Madison's Hamptons wedding reception.
I hesitated, then clicked play.
The elegant white tent came into view, champagne flowing, string quartet playing. Then the camera panned to a woman in her fifties, wearing cowboy boots and a floral dress that screamed discount department store. She was swaying slightly, a half-empty champagne flute in her hand.
"That's my baby girl!" she bellowed, her Southern accent thick as molasses. "My Madison! Always knew she'd marry rich!"
The camera zoomed in on Madison's horrified face, then to Cameron's tight smile.
The woman—who could only be Madison's mother—belched loudly, then continued, "Y'all are so fancy! So different from our double-wide back in Tuscaloosa!"
A waiter approached, attempting to guide her away. "Get your hands off me, pretty boy!" she snapped, slapping his arm. "I'm family! F-A-M-L-Y!" Her misspelling hung in the air as she fumbled with her phone, apparently livestreaming the entire debacle.
The video cut to Madison frantically trying to usher her mother away while Cameron stood frozen, his perfect image crumbling in real-time.
I set down my phone, a strange feeling bubbling up inside me. Not quite satisfaction, but something adjacent to it. The universe had a peculiar sense of justice sometimes.
My phone lit up again with David's unanswered message. This time, I didn't hesitate.
"Coffee sounds perfect. Tomorrow?"
As I set my phone down, I caught my reflection in the window. For the first time in years, I was smiling—really smiling. The woman who had been erased was beginning to reappear, one stroke at a time.
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