
He Divorced Me, So I Destroyed His Empire.
Chapter 1
Mia POV
"Sign it."
Four years of marriage... reduced to a single command.
Tyler slid the divorce papers across the mahogany table like he was closing a business deal.
I stared at the crisp white pages, my name printed in bold at the top. Mia D'Stone, soon to be just Mia again. The irony wasn't lost on me.
"Did you hear me?" His voice cut through my thoughts, sharp and impatient. "Sign the papers, Mia. Let's not drag this out."
I looked up at him. The man I'd spent four years building up, financing, and supporting. Tyler D'Stone sat across from me in his tailored Tom Ford suit, the one I'd bought him for our third anniversary. His jaw was set, his eyes cold.
"You're not even going to pretend this hurts you?" I asked, my voice eerily calm.
"We're adults, Mia. This is business." He had the audacity to look annoyed. “I don’t do emotional decisions, Mia. I do profitable ones.”
Business.
Four years of my life spent playing the supportive wife while he built an empire on my money, and he called it business.
"Right." I leaned back in my chair, crossing my legs. "Business. How could I forget?"
The lawyer, some slick forty-something in a gray suit, cleared his throat. "Mrs. D'Stone, if you'd like to review the settlement terms..."
"Oh, I'll review them." I pulled the papers closer, flipping through each page with deliberate slowness. "Unlike some people, I actually read what I sign."
Tyler's fingers drummed against the table. Always so impatient.
"There's nothing complicated about it," he said. "You keep the house in Portland and I keep D'Stone Construction. It’s a clean split."
Clean split, as if our marriage was something that could be divided down the middle like a piece of property.
"And Samantha?" The name tasted like poison on my tongue. "Where does she fit into this clean split?"
His face didn't even flicker. No shame. No guilt. Nothing. "Samantha's father is investing in the new downtown project," he said, like that explained and justified everything. "It's a significant opportunity for the company."
"Ah." I nodded slowly, my nails tapping against the paper. "So you're upgrading. Trading up for a newer model with better connections."
"Don't be crude, Mia."
The man was divorcing me for his mistress and I was being crude.
I wanted to laugh. I wanted to scream. I wanted to throw the papers in his smug face and watch him scramble. But I didn't. Because four years had taught me something valuable. Control was everything.
"You're right," I said smoothly. "I apologize. This is business, after all."
The lawyer shifted uncomfortably, probably due to the tension. "Shall we proceed with the signatures?"
"By all means." I picked up the gold pen, the one Tyler had given me on our first anniversary. Another irony.
I read every single line. The house in Portland. The cars. The joint accounts, split fifty-fifty. And there, buried in the middle of page seven, the clause that made this whole charade worthwhile.
Tyler D'Stone relinquishes all shares and interests in D&M Solutions to Mia D'Stone, effective immediately upon signing.
D&M Solutions. The "consulting firm" I'd set up three years ago. The silent partner that had been funneling contracts to D'Stone Construction, inflating his success, making him look like a genius.
Tyler hadn't even noticed the clause when his lawyer drafted it. Why would he? D&M Solutions was just my "little hobby project." Something to keep me busy while he built his empire.
Stupid, arrogant man.
"Everything look acceptable?" the lawyer asked.
"Perfect," I said, my hand almost trembled. Almost.. "Absolutely perfect."
Tyler grabbed the pen before the ink was even dry, scrawling his signature across the bottom of each page. He didn't read a single word. Just signed and signed and signed, sealing his fate with every stroke.
Four years I'd funded this man's ego, watched him preen and posture, taking credit for my strategies, my connections, my money. Four years of swallowing my pride while he paraded his affairs in front of me like trophies.
The first one had been a secretary. Cliché, really. I'd found the hotel receipt in his jacket pocket during our first anniversary. I'd cried for three days, then I'd gotten smart.
If Tyler wanted to play games, I'd play better.
"There." Tyler pushed the papers back toward the lawyer, standing up with that confident swagger that used to make my heart race but now it just made my blood boil. "We're done here."
"Not quite," the lawyer said, gathering the documents. "There's a thirty-day waiting period before..."
"I don't care about the details, fast track it if you have to..." Tyler interrupted, checking his watch. A Rolex. The one I'd bought him for closing his first major deal. The deal I'd handed him. "Just finalize it."
He turned to me. "This is for the best, Mia," he said, like he was doing me a favor. "We both know the marriage was over a long time ago."
"Oh, absolutely," I agreed, standing up and smoothing my black dress. "I think we both stopped trying around... what would you say? Year one?"
His jaw tightened. "Don't be bitter, it's not attractive."
"You're right again," I said sweetly. "No bitterness here. Just... clarity."
I used to love this man enough to ruin myself for him, but now I was going to ruin him instead.
"Good." He grabbed his briefcase, already mentally checked out. "D'Stone Construction is doing better than ever, by the way. In case you were wondering. The Riverside Project alone is going to triple our revenue."
"That's wonderful, Tyler," I said instead, my smile never wavering. "Really. I'm so happy for you."
He paused, studying my face like he was trying to find the catch. "Well," he said finally, adjusting his tie. "I should go. Samantha's waiting."
Of course she was.
He walked toward the door, then stopped, turning back one last time. "You'll be fine, Mia. You've got the house, the settlement money. You'll land on your feet."
"I always do," I said softly.
He nodded, satisfied, and reached for the door handle.
"Tyler?"
He turned back, eyebrows raised.
I tilted my head, letting my smile sharpen just a fraction. "I hope your business survives it."
"Survives what?"
"This." I gestured vaguely at the space between us. "The divorce. You know how these things can get... complicated."
He laughed. "My business is fine, Mia. Better than fine but I appreciate your concern."
"Of course." I sat back down, crossing my legs. "Just a thought."
He shook his head, amused by what he thought was my pathetic attempt at a threat, and walked out. The door clicked shut behind him with a soft, final sound.
I sat there in the silence, listening to his footsteps fade down the hallway. The lawyer shuffled his papers nervously, probably wondering if I was going to break down now that Tyler was gone.
I didn't.
Instead, I pulled out my phone and scrolled through my contacts, finding the name I needed. My finger hovered over the call button for just a second, savoring the moment.
Four years I'd built your empire, Tyler. Piece by piece. Contract by contract. Every major client. Every successful bid. Every expansion.
Me.
And now?
Now I was going to watch it all crumble.
I pressed call.
It rang once. Twice.
"Mia?" The voice on the other end was crisp, professional. "Is it done?"
"It's done," I confirmed, my voice steady and cold. “Pull the plug on Project Riverside.”
There was a pause, then a low chuckle. "Mia… that will bankrupt him.”
I thought about Tyler's smug face, I smiled "I know.”
"Consider it done."
"Perfect." I ended the call and set my phone down on the table, staring at the empty chair where Tyler had been sitting just moments ago.
The lawyer cleared his throat. "Mrs. D'Stone, are you... alright?"
I looked up at him, and for the first time since Tyler had slid those papers across the table, I smiled. "I'm wonderful," I said. "Absolutely wonderful."
Because Tyler D'Stone had no idea what was coming. He thought he'd won. He thought he'd walked away with everything that mattered.
But he'd forgotten one crucial thing.
I'd always been the one pulling the strings.
And now?
Now I was about to cut every single one.
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