
My Husband Cut the Brakes on My Parents’ Car
My Husband Cut the Brakes on My Parents’ Car Chapter 1
The quarterly reports for Ford Enterprises were a sea of black ink, a testament to twelve years of sleepless nights and ruthless ambition. I sat in my corner office, thirty floors above the sprawling grid of Manhattan, the city looking like a circuit board we had personally wired. The silence was absolute, save for the hum of the climate control, until the heavy oak door creaked open.
My assistant, usually composed, looked pale as she placed a thick manila envelope on my desk. "Courier just dropped this off, Mrs. Ford. Marked urgent. Personal."
She retreated before I could thank her. My fingers brushed the rough paper. There was no return address. Inside, there was no letter, no ransom note, just a single 8x10 photograph.
The world didn't stop. The sun didn't blot out. But the air in the room seemed to solidify, pressing against my lungs.
It was Liam. My husband. The man who had once split a stale bagel with me on a park bench in the Bronx because we couldn't afford two. In the photo, he was on one knee on the sidewalk outside a generic brick building—a college dorm, perhaps. He wasn't proposing. He was tying the shoelace of a girl who couldn't have been older than twenty-two. She looked down at him with a mix of adoration and triumph, her hand resting possessively on his shoulder.
It wasn't the infidelity that made my stomach turn; rumors were the background radiation of our social circle. It was the act. Service. Submission. Tenderness. Liam hadn't tied my shoes, opened my door, or looked at me with that kind of soft, unguarded devotion in a decade. We were partners, warriors, a corporate monolith. We were not *tender*.
I stared at the girl’s cheap sneakers. The betrayal clicked into place, not as a shock, but as a confirmation of a sickness I’d been ignoring. The late nights. The new cologne. The way he flinched when I touched his arm.
Slowly, deliberately, I reached for my left hand. The diamond was heavy, a cold weight I had grown accustomed to dragging around. I slid it off. The skin underneath was pale, a ghost of the bond we supposedly shared. I dropped the ring into the envelope with the photo. It made a dull *thud*.
I picked up my phone and dialed. Keith answered on the first ring.
"Norah?"
"Draft the papers, Keith," I said. My voice was steady, terrifyingly calm even to my own ears. "And freeze the joint personal accounts. Immediately."
"Norah, are you sure? Once we pull this trigger—"
"It's done, Keith. He's done."
***
The penthouse was a mausoleum of marble and glass, cold even in the summer. I had the staff pack his things before they left for the evening. Three Louis Vuitton trunks sat in the foyer like tombstones.
I was sitting on the white leather sofa, sipping black coffee that had long since gone cold, when the elevator doors slid open. Liam strode in, loosening his tie, the master of his domain. He froze when he saw the luggage.
"Going on a trip?" he asked, a confused smile twitching at the corner of his mouth. He walked into the living room, bringing the smell of the city and that cloying new cologne with him.
I didn't stand. I just watched him. He looked tired, the lines around his eyes deeper than I remembered. Or maybe I was just finally really looking at him.
"They aren't mine," I said.
He stopped, his brow furrowing. "What is this, Norah?"
I held out the blue folder containing the preliminary divorce filing. He took it, scanning the header. His face went from confused to red in a heartbeat. The vein in his temple, the one that always throbbed when a deal went south, began to pulse.
"Divorce?" He laughed, a harsh, barking sound. "Are you out of your mind? We have the merger next month. You can't just—"
"I can."
"Over what?" He threw the papers onto the coffee table. They slid across the marble, stopping inches from my coffee cup. "You're being hysterical. Is this about the missed dinner last week? Because I told you, the board—"
I didn't let him finish. I pulled the photograph from under the coaster and slid it toward him.
Liam looked down. The color drained from his face so fast it was like watching a plug being pulled. His mouth opened, then closed. He looked at the photo, then at me, his eyes wide with a panicked, boyish fear that might have worked on me fifteen years ago.
"Norah, baby, that's... that's not what it looks like," he stammered, his hands coming up in a placating gesture. "She's a student. An intern. She tripped. It was a charitable gesture. You're reading into—"
"A charitable gesture," I repeated. The words tasted like ash. "You don't do charity, Liam. You do investments."
"You're throwing away a billion-dollar life over a shoelace?" His voice rose, the aggression returning now that the charm had failed. He stepped toward me, looming. "You're nothing without me, Norah. I built this. I built *us*."
I stood up then. I was wearing my mother's pearl earrings—the only thing I owned that his money hadn't bought. I didn't yell. I didn't cry. I simply walked past him, toward the elevator.
"Norah!" he roared, the sound bouncing off the high ceilings.
The elevator doors closed, cutting off his rage, leaving him alone in the glass tower we had built together.
***
The Obsidian Club was where the city's predators went to congratulate themselves on their kills. The charity gala was in full swing, a sea of tuxedos and designer gowns under dim, amber lighting. I walked in alone, head high, wearing a dress the color of dried blood.
Whispers rippled through the room. They knew. Or they suspected. In this town, blood in the water attracted sharks before the wound even opened.
I was reaching for a glass of champagne when a heavy hand landed on my shoulder. It was Julian Thorne, a trust-fund board member whose primary contribution to Ford Enterprises was his last name and his alcohol tolerance.
"Norah," he slurred, leaning in too close. His breath smelled of scotch and entitlement. "Word is, the King is dead. Or at least, sleeping in a hotel tonight. Trouble in paradise?"
He grinned, looking around for an audience. "Maybe you finally realized you don't have the stomach for the big leagues without Liam holding your hand."
The room quieted. Eyes darted toward us. This was a test. If I faltered now, the stock would tank by morning.
I turned to him, brushing his hand off my shoulder as if it were a piece of lint. I didn't raise my voice; I pitched it low, forcing him to lean in, forcing the room to strain to hear.
"Julian," I said, smiling pleasantly. "It's adorable that you think Liam holds my hand. But you seem to have forgotten who holds the intellectual property rights to the flagship software that pays for your polo ponies."
His grin faltered. "Now, Norah—"
"Section 4, Clause B of the founding charter," I recited, my eyes locking onto his. "I retain sole ownership of the source code. If I leave, the code leaves. And if the code leaves, your dividends don't just drop, Julian. They evaporate."
He paled, stepping back. The crowd was silent, the tension thick enough to choke on.
I caught the eye of the head of security, a man I had hired personally. I gave a subtle nod toward Julian. Two large men materialized from the shadows, flanking the board member.
"Mr. Thorne is feeling unwell," I announced to the room, my voice clear and cool. "Please escort him out."
As they dragged a protesting Julian toward the exit, my phone buzzed in my clutch. It was Liam. Again. And again.
I didn't answer. I took a sip of champagne, the bubbles sharp against my tongue. The Queen wasn't behind the throne anymore. She was burning it down.
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