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Love After a Broken Marriage Novel Cover

Love After a Broken Marriage

The Seattle rain pattered against the taxi window as I stared at the familiar skyline. After three years away, the city's silhouette was both comforting and strange—just like the feeling in my chest. Three years of caring for my grandfather in his final days, three years away from the life I'd built with Mason. I should have felt nothing but relief to finally be home. Yet something felt wrong even before the taxi pulled up to our mansion's circular driveway. "Welcome back to Seattle, ma'am," the driver said, helping with my luggage. I tipped him generously and turned to face the three-story Victorian home Mason and I had purchased together. The garden looked different—the roses I'd planted replaced by exotic orchids I didn't recognize. Small changes that sent a chill down my spine despite the mild spring evening. When my key didn't work in the front door, the chill intensified.
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Chapter 3

The law offices of Morrison & Associates felt like a sanctuary after the suffocating atmosphere of what used to be my home. I sat across from James Morrison, my divorce attorney, watching him review the financial documents Margaret had compiled. His expression grew grimmer with each page.

"Mrs. Rodriguez," he said, using the name I suddenly couldn't wait to shed, "this is quite comprehensive. Your husband has been systematically draining accounts you established for his business ventures to fund personal expenses for another woman."

"Two point seven million dollars," I said quietly. "While I was caring for my dying grandfather."

James nodded, his pen tapping against the mahogany desk. "We can file for divorce on grounds of adultery and financial misconduct. Given the evidence, I'm confident we can secure a favorable settlement. However, I should warn you—this will likely get contentious."

"I don't care," I replied, my voice steadier than I felt. "I want every penny back, plus damages for the necklace. And I want him cut off from all my accounts immediately."

"Consider it done."

By noon, the financial machinery was in motion. Margaret worked with surgical precision, freezing joint accounts and redirecting automatic transfers that had been feeding Mason's company for years. Every credit line, every business loan backed by my assets, every financial lifeline I'd unknowingly provided—cut.

I returned home to find Sariyah in my study, directing two men as they removed my grandmother's antique desk.

"What are you doing?" I demanded, watching them manhandle furniture that had been in my family for generations.

"Oh, Emilia!" Sariyah turned with that saccharine smile. "Mason and I decided this room needed updating. All this old, dusty furniture is so depressing. We're going for a more modern aesthetic."

She gestured to swatches of fabric in harsh metallics and geometric patterns that looked nothing like the warm, traditional style I'd cultivated. My mother's portrait had been removed from above the fireplace, replaced by an abstract painting that looked like someone had thrown paint at a canvas in anger.

"This is my study," I said, my voice dangerously quiet.

"Was your study," Sariyah corrected with a laugh. "Mason said you need to stop living in the past. Out with the old, in with the new. Isn't that right, darling?"

Mason appeared in the doorway, loosening his tie with the casual confidence of someone who believed he controlled everything around him. "Emilia, you're back early. Do you like what Sariyah's done with the place?"

I stared at him—this man who'd shared my bed, my dreams, my inheritance—and felt nothing but cold fury. "You gave her permission to redecorate my study?"

"Our study," he corrected. "And yes, it needed modernizing. You can't expect everything to stay frozen in time just because you have sentimental attachments to outdated furniture."

The movers carried out my grandmother's desk as we spoke, its polished wood gleaming one last time in the afternoon light before disappearing through the front door. I watched years of family history being erased with casual indifference.

"Where are they taking it?" I asked.

"Storage," Sariyah said dismissively. "Or maybe donation. We haven't decided yet."

My phone buzzed with a text from Margaret: *First wave of account freezes complete. Mason's company payroll will bounce tomorrow morning.*

I looked at Mason, who was admiring Sariyah's redecorating choices with the satisfaction of someone who believed he was improving his property. He had no idea that in twelve hours, his business would be in crisis.

"I filed for divorce this morning," I announced.

The room went silent except for the sound of the movers' footsteps on the stairs above us.

Mason's confident expression flickered. "You're bluffing."

"Am I?" I pulled out the divorce papers and set them on the new glass desk that had replaced my grandmother's antique. "You'll also find that several of your business accounts have been frozen pending the proceedings."

Now I had his attention. Mason's face went pale as he grabbed the papers, his eyes scanning the legal language with growing alarm.

"You can't do this," he said, but his voice had lost its earlier certainty.

"I can, and I have." I turned to leave, then paused. "Oh, and Sariyah? That storage unit you mentioned? I hope you kept the receipts. You'll need them when I sue you for theft and destruction of property."

As I walked away, I heard Mason's voice rising behind me, no longer controlled but edged with panic. "Emilia, you're being ridiculous! You can't destroy everything we've built over a misunderstanding!"

But I kept walking, my heels clicking against the marble floor with the rhythm of a countdown. By tomorrow morning, Mason Rodriguez would learn exactly what happened when you mistake generosity for weakness.

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