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The Divorce He Begged For Novel Cover

The Divorce He Begged For

He told me I was stressed. That I was creating tension. That his sister was a lifesaver. I had the video. His sister, smiling while she filmed my son's meltdown. The midnight texts asking if I was asleep yet. The voice message where she said she wanted to move in—permanently. My husband chose not to look. So I stopped asking him to. What none of us knew: Jade had done this before. Three families. Four cities. A predator who slips into homes on the edge, becomes the better version of the wife, and is already positioned when everything falls apart. What none of us knew: the one man who did see her was the family patriarch—my father-in-law, who built an empire and had been quietly building a file. And he came to me with a single question. Are you going to stay invisible? Or are you going to make yourself impossible to ignore?
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Chapter 3

"Custody."

The word fell between us like a stone into still water. Priya's pen hovered over the document, waiting. I stared at the blank line next to Primary Custodial Parent and felt my hand begin to shake.

This was real.

"Take your time," Priya said. Her voice was gentle. Her eyes stayed sharp. She'd seen this before. Women like me, sitting across this desk, realizing their marriage had turned into a negotiation.

I picked up the pen. My fingers felt borrowed. Belonging to someone else. Someone who hadn't spent eleven years building a life with a man who now looked at her like a problem to manage.

I wrote my name. The letters came out uneven.

Sloane Mitchell.

I set the pen down and reached for my cold brew. It had gone room temperature an hour ago. The bitterness coated my tongue without any of the comfort it was supposed to provide.

"We'll need to define visitation," Priya said. "Weekends, holidays, birthdays. Standard, unless you have concerns about his parenting."

"I don't." My voice sounded hollow. "Ryker's a good father. He loves Noah."

"Then we keep it fair. Judges like cooperative parents."

I nodded, but my mind had already drifted. To Noah's face this morning. To the way he'd wrapped his arms around Ryker's legs, so absolutely certain his daddy could fix anything.

"One more thing," Priya said. She tapped her pen against the desk in a rhythmic click. "Serving the papers. We can use a process server, but that creates more hostility. If you have someone in his family who could act as an intermediary—someone neutral—it can take the edge off."

I frowned. "In his family?"

"A relative who won't immediately take sides. Someone he respects." She shrugged. "Not required. I've seen it help. Especially when there's a child involved."

I thought about Ryker's family. His mother lived in Florida and hadn't visited since Noah was two. His brother was estranged after a falling-out I'd never fully understood.

And then there was Caden.

Ryker's father.

I hadn't spoken to him in months. Not since Noah's birthday party, when he'd shown up with a wrapped present and a quiet smile and complimented the cake I'd made from scratch. He'd always been that way. Reserved but kind. The kind of man who listened more than he spoke. Who noticed when someone's glass was empty before they did.

He'd never treated me like Ryker did—as a project, a problem to be solved. He'd just treated me like family.

"Maybe," I said slowly. "His father."

Priya raised an eyebrow. "You trust him?"

"I think so." I pulled out my phone. Caden's contact was still there, untouched since I'd texted him a thank-you after the birthday party. "He's always been decent to me. Fair."

"Then reach out. See if he'd accept service on Ryker's behalf."

I typed with trembling fingers: I need to ask a favor. Are you free?

I hit send before I could second-guess myself.

The response came faster than I expected. Less than ten minutes. The screen lit up in my hand.

I'm at the office. Come by.

No questions. No demands for an explanation. Just that.

"He said yes," I told Priya. My voice felt strange in my throat.

"Good." She slid the papers into a manila folder and handed it across the desk. "Copies. Keep them safe. I'll file the originals first thing tomorrow."

The folder weighed almost nothing. It felt like carrying lead.

The Uber dropped me outside Ryker's office building twenty minutes later. I'd changed into a blazer and slacks in the back of Priya's building bathroom, scrubbed the exhaustion from my face with cold water, and tried to look like a woman who had her life together.

The lobby was all glass and steel. Corporate. Cold. I walked up to the front desk where a receptionist with a headset and a practiced smile looked up.

"I have documents for Ryker Mitchell. Personal. Can you make sure they go to him directly?"

The receptionist's smile flickered. Recognition, maybe. She knew who I was. Or at least, she knew I was his wife.

"Of course, Mrs. Mitchell. I'll have someone bring them up immediately."

I handed her the folder. Watched her place it in a tray with other interoffice mail.

Then I turned and walked toward the elevators.

My phone buzzed in my pocket. I pulled it out.

Ryker.

I stared at the name. At the photo next to it—him and Noah at the beach last summer, matching sunglasses, grinning.

The phone vibrated through the full ring cycle. I counted each buzz.

Then I declined the call.

The elevator doors opened. I stepped in and pressed the ground floor. The car was empty except for me and my reflection in the mirrored wall.

I looked different. Sharper. Dark circles under my eyes, but my jaw was set. I'd been chewing my lower lip without noticing—the skin was white from pressure.

You're doing this, I thought. You're actually doing this.

The elevator hummed downward. Floors ticked by. Fifteen. Twelve. Nine.

My phone buzzed again. A voicemail notification. I didn't listen to it.

Six. Four. Two.

The doors slid open and spilled me into the lobby.

And there—standing near the glass entrance with his hands in his coat pockets—was Caden.

He was taller than Ryker. Same broad shoulders, same square jaw. But his hair was steel-gray and his posture more relaxed, the way only a man who'd already lived through every kind of crisis could be relaxed. Dark coat over a crisp button-down. His eyes tracked me as I stepped out of the elevator.

I hadn't expected him to be waiting here. His office was across town. He'd said so in his text. But here he was. Like he'd known I'd need someone to walk out with.

Our eyes met.

He didn't ask about the documents. Didn't mention Ryker or the favor or anything about why I'd reached out.

Instead he looked at me. Really looked. And his expression shifted into something softer than the professional mask he'd been wearing when I walked over.

"Have you eaten?"

The question caught me off-guard.

"What?"

"Dinner." He nodded toward the street, where the evening had turned purple and gold. "It's almost seven. You look like you haven't had a real meal in days."

I opened my mouth to argue. The truth was, I couldn't remember the last time I'd eaten. Breakfast? Maybe. Just coffee. Coffee counted, technically.

He tilted his head. Waited.

"No," I admitted. "I haven't."

Caden nodded once. Then he held out his arm. The gesture was so old-fashioned it almost made me smile.

"Come on. There's a place around the corner. Quiet. Good wine."

I hesitated. Behind me the elevator doors closed with a soft chime. The lobby stretched empty, the receptionist already gone for the day.

I'm serving your son divorce papers, I thought, and you want to buy me dinner?

But Caden's eyes were steady. Warm, even. Like he already understood something I hadn't figured out yet.

"Okay," I said.

He led me to the door. I followed him out of the building, away from Ryker's office, away from the manila folder now sitting on his desk with my signature on every page.

The evening air hit my face cool and fresh. I took a breath.

And for the first time in months, my lungs felt full.

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