
Rejecting the Billionaire's Plea
Chapter 1
The mahogany desk gleamed under the harsh fluorescent lights of Patterson & Associates, its polished surface reflecting the stack of divorce papers that would officially end my seventh marriage to Wyatt Dixon. Seven times. The number should have felt absurd, embarrassing even, but as I lifted the Mont Blanc pen—the same one Wyatt had given me for our third anniversary—I felt nothing but a strange, hollow calm.
"Mrs. Dixon, are you certain you want to proceed?" Mr. Patterson's voice seemed to come from underwater, distant and muffled. His weathered face creased with concern as he watched me hover the pen over the signature line. "Perhaps you'd like to take more time to consider—"
"I'm certain." The words came out steady, final. No tremor in my voice, no tears threatening to spill. Just certainty.
Across from me, Wyatt shifted in his leather chair, the sound sharp in the sterile silence. I could feel his eyes boring into me, searching for cracks in my composure, waiting for the familiar breakdown that had marked our previous six divorces. The screaming, the begging, the desperate promises to be better, to be enough. But that woman—the one who had clawed at his chest and sobbed into his shirts—she was gone.
"Kennedy." His voice carried that familiar note of practiced patience, the tone he used when he thought I was being dramatic. "You know this is just temporary. Once Sienna gets settled back in the country, once she finds her footing again, we'll—"
"Sign here as well, Mr. Dixon." I slid the papers across the desk without looking at him, my movements precise and mechanical. The gold band on my finger caught the light as I moved, a circle that had been removed and replaced so many times it had worn a permanent groove in my skin.
Wyatt's hand stilled over the documents. "You're not even going to fight this time? No tears, no—"
"Should there be?" I finally met his gaze, and something flickered across his face—confusion, maybe even disappointment. As if my pain had been entertainment, a reassurance of his own importance.
He signed with a flourish, his signature bold and careless. The same signature that had appeared on six previous divorce decrees, six remarriage certificates, and countless promises that had crumbled like autumn leaves.
"I'll have the movers come for your things next week," he said, already reaching for his phone. "The usual arrangement. You can stay at the Meridian until—"
"That won't be necessary." I stood, smoothing down my black dress—funeral attire for the death of something that had never truly been alive. "I'll handle my own arrangements."
The penthouse felt different when I returned, as if the very air had shifted in my absence. Wyatt followed me through the marble foyer, his footsteps echoing in the cavernous space that had never quite felt like home. Twenty floors above the city, surrounded by floor-to-ceiling windows and designer furniture, yet I'd always felt like a guest in my own life.
I moved through the rooms methodically, pulling my belongings from drawers and closets with the efficiency of someone who had done this before. Six times before, to be exact. But this time, there was no frantic energy, no desperate attempt to pack everything as if I might never return. Because deep down, I knew I wouldn't.
"You're being awfully calm about this," Wyatt observed from the doorway of our—his—bedroom. He leaned against the frame with studied casualness, but I caught the way his fingers drummed against the wood, a nervous habit he'd never quite conquered.
"Should I be hysterical?" I folded a silk blouse with careful precision, the same blouse I'd worn to our fourth remarriage ceremony. "Would that make you feel better?"
"It would make you seem human." The words slipped out before he could stop them, and for a moment, something raw flickered in his dark eyes. "Kennedy, you know I love you. This thing with Sienna, it's just—she needs me right now. She's fragile, and after everything she's been through—"
"I know." I continued packing, each movement deliberate and final. "She always needs you when she comes back. And you always go to her."
"But I always come back to you too." His voice took on that coaxing quality, the one that had once made my heart race with hope. "We always find our way back to each other. It's what we do."
I paused, a cashmere sweater halfway into the suitcase, and looked at him—really looked at him. The sharp jawline, the perfectly styled hair, the expensive suit that cost more than most people's cars. He was beautiful, had always been beautiful, and I had mistaken that beauty for love, his possession for passion.
"Yes," I said quietly. "It's what we do."
His phone buzzed against the nightstand, and I watched his entire body tense. Even before he reached for it, I knew. The way his pupils dilated slightly, the unconscious straightening of his shoulders, the sudden energy that seemed to crackle around him like electricity.
"Sienna," he breathed into the phone, and just like that, I ceased to exist.
I finished packing in silence while he paced the living room, his voice carrying through the open door in urgent, tender whispers. The same tone he'd once used with me, before I became routine, before I became expected.
When I emerged with my single suitcase—everything that mattered to me fit into one bag, I realized with bitter clarity—he was already reaching for his keys.
"I have to go," he said, not quite meeting my eyes. "Sienna's flight landed early, and she's... she's having a difficult time. But we'll talk tomorrow, okay? About the remarriage timeline, about—"
"Of course." I set my suitcase by the door and watched him straighten his tie in the hallway mirror. "Give her my regards."
He paused, keys halfway to his pocket, and for a moment I thought he might actually see me. Really see me. But then his phone buzzed again, and the moment shattered like glass.
"Lock up when you leave," he called over his shoulder, already moving toward the elevator. "And Kennedy? Don't overthink this. We'll be fine. We always are."
The elevator doors closed with a soft chime, and I stood alone in the echoing silence of our tomb of a home. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city sparkled below like scattered diamonds, beautiful and distant and cold.
I picked up my suitcase and walked toward the door, my heels clicking against the marble with a finality that seemed to reverberate through my bones. At the threshold, I turned back one last time, memorizing the space where I had died a thousand small deaths.
Then I stepped into the hallway and let the door close behind me with a soft, definitive click.
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