
Nora's Revenge on Her Ex
Nora's Revenge on Her Ex Chapter 1
The condensation on the bottle of Veuve Clicquot was ruining the mahogany finish of the dining table, but I didn’t care. Tonight was the finish line. After three years of scrimping, three years of eating ramen so Nathan could eat steak, and three years of funding a law degree on a jewelry designer’s erratic income, Nathan Jones had passed the bar. He had the job at the top-tier firm in Manhattan. We had made it.
The lock tumbled. I smoothed the skirt of the vintage dress I’d altered myself, forcing a smile onto lips that felt tight from anxiety. I expected him to burst in, lifting me off the ground in a spin of relief and cheap cologne.
Instead, the door swung open slowly. Nathan stood there, looking devastatingly handsome in the charcoal suit I had put on my credit card last month. But he wasn’t holding flowers. He was holding a hand. A hand with manicured red nails that I recognized instantly.
Lainey Black stepped out from behind him, her fingers laced through his. My best friend. The girl I’d fed, clothed, and treated like the sister I never had.
The air left the room. The scent of the rosemary chicken I’d roasted suddenly smelled cloying, like rot.
"Nora," Nathan said. His voice wasn’t apologetic; it was professional. Detached. Like he was reading a deposition. "We need to talk."
I didn’t move. My eyes were fixed on where their skin touched. "You’re early."
"I got the offer," Nathan said, stepping fully into the apartment, pulling Lainey with him. She wouldn’t meet my eyes, staring instead at the champagne bottle with a small, triumphant smirk. "But things are different now. New York… it’s a different world. It requires a certain caliber of partner."
"A caliber?" I repeated, the words tasting like ash. "I’m not a handgun, Nathan."
"You’re a small-business owner, Nora. You’re rustic. Sweet," he added, the compliment landing like a slap. "But Lainey understands the social demands of my future. We’re… soulmates. We realized it a few months ago. We didn't want to distract you while you were working so hard."
"Distract me?" My voice was dangerously quiet. The heat rising in my chest wasn't sorrow; it was a molten, white-hot clarity. "You mean while I was paying your rent?"
Lainey finally spoke, her voice a high, feigned sweetness. "Oh, Nora, don't make this about money. It’s about love. You can’t put a price on true love."
I looked at her—really looked at her—and saw the hunger behind her eyes. She didn't love him. She loved the suit. She loved the title.
I didn't scream. I didn't throw the champagne. I simply turned my back on them and walked to my desk. My hands didn't shake. The muscle memory of running a business took over. I woke my laptop, the screen glowing blue in the dim room, and opened the file I’d named *NJ_Expenses.xlsx*. I had kept it for tax purposes, a meticulous record of every shared expense, every tuition installment, every grocery bill.
The printer whirred to life, a grinding mechanical sound that filled the silence. Nathan shifted his weight. "Nora, please. Don't be dramatic."
I snatched the warm paper from the tray and turned, walking back to them. I shoved the document against Nathan’s chest.
"One hundred fifty-two thousand, four hundred and thirty dollars," I said, my voice steady as steel. "That covers your tuition, your share of the rent, your utilities, your food, and that suit you’re wearing to dump me."
Nathan blinked, looking down at the spreadsheet. "What is this?"
"An invoice," I said. "You have forty-eight hours to wire the full amount to my account. If you don't, I will file a civil suit for financial restitution and fraud. And I will make sure a copy of this suit lands on the desk of every senior partner at your new firm before your first day."
His face drained of color. "You wouldn't. That would ruin me."
"You’re a lawyer, Nathan," I said, stepping into his personal space, forcing him to retreat. "You know the cost of breach of contract. Welcome to the big leagues."
***
The next morning, the apartment felt cavernous. The champagne had gone flat in the bottle.
A sharp knock rattled the door. I opened it to find Lainey, holding a stack of flattened cardboard boxes. She breezed past me, her confidence restored now that Nathan wasn't there to look terrified.
"I'm just here for his books," she said, tossing her hair. She began shoving textbooks into a box, her movements aggressive. "Honestly, Nora. Billing an ex-lover? It’s pathetic. It’s so… transactional. No wonder he left. He needed a woman, not an accountant."
I leaned against the doorframe, sipping black coffee. I watched her struggle with the tape gun. She looked ridiculous—trying to play the role of the high-society wife in a denim jacket I knew she’d stolen from my closet three years ago.
I walked over to the corner, picked up a cardboard box filled with cheap costume jewelry, half-used perfumes, and trinkets Lainey had left here over the years. I walked to the door and held it open.
"Get out," I said.
Lainey straightened up, clutching a stack of legal briefs. "Excuse me? I'm not done."
I dropped the box of her things at her feet. It landed with a hollow clatter. "You can keep the trash," I said, nodding at the box, then shifting my gaze to the empty space where Nathan had stood the night before. "All of it. He’s your problem now. But if you’re not out of my apartment in ten seconds, I’m adding a security deposit to his bill."
Lainey’s mouth opened, but the look in my eyes must have stopped her. She grabbed her box, scrambling into the hallway, her face flushed with humiliation.
I slammed the door, the sound echoing like a gunshot. I didn't cry. I didn't collapse.
I pulled my phone from my pocket and dialed.
"Chelsea?" I said when my assistant answered, my voice clear and vibrating with new energy. "Cancel my meetings for the week. And start packing the inventory. We’re leaving Seattle."
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