
Wife Ends Marriage Battle
Chapter 3
I sat in my father's study, the broken pieces of the Tiffany brooch arranged on a velvet cloth before me. My hands trembled as I tried to fit the shattered sapphire back together, but the jagged edges refused to align. Just like my marriage.
The room was my sanctuary in this penthouse—the one space Dorothy hadn't invaded. My father's military medals gleamed in their display case. His weathered copy of 'The Art of War' sat on the desk beside a photograph of him in full dress uniform, his hand on my shoulder at my West Point graduation. Before I'd chosen a different path. Before I'd chosen Stephen.
"General Armstrong wouldn't retreat," I whispered to the photograph. "Neither will his daughter."
My phone buzzed. Emma. My assistant had become more than an employee over the years—she was the one person who truly saw me, not as an Armstrong legacy or a Morrison trophy wife, but as Finley.
"I need you," was all I said when I answered.
"I'm already in a cab," she replied. "Twenty minutes."
When Emma arrived, her eyes went immediately to the velvet cloth with its constellation of broken gems. She didn't gasp or offer empty platitudes. Instead, she closed the study door, set down her bag, and pulled out her tablet.
"Document everything," she said, her voice calm but her eyes blazing with controlled fury. "Every piece, every angle. We'll need photographs for both the insurance claim and the divorce proceedings."
I looked up sharply. "I didn't say anything about divorce."
Emma's gaze was steady. "You didn't have to. I've watched this situation deteriorate for months. When you called, I heard it in your voice—you've made your decision."
She was right. The moment Stephen had chosen his mother's lies over the shattered remains of my heritage, something had broken inside me too—something that couldn't be repaired.
"Stephen will fight it," I said, watching as Emma carefully photographed each broken piece. "He'll never let me go easily."
"Then we don't make it easy for him either." Emma's efficiency was comforting as she cataloged the damage. "I've already researched three top divorce attorneys who specialize in high-net-worth separations. Rebecca Chen is at the top of my list."
"Rebecca?" I almost smiled despite everything. "My college roommate?"
"Who now happens to run the most successful divorce practice in Manhattan." Emma showed me Rebecca's firm website on her tablet. "She specializes in cases involving professional reputations. Given Stephen's position at the firm..."
The implication hung between us. Stephen's career was everything to him—the validation he'd sought since climbing out of poverty. His reputation at the firm was his most vulnerable point.
"I don't want revenge," I said softly, touching the largest piece of sapphire. "I just want out."
"Sometimes," Emma replied, "those are the same thing."
We were interrupted by a knock at the front door. Emma checked her watch and nodded. "That's probably him. I took the liberty."
"Who?"
"Apollo Hansen. I called him after you called me."
My childhood friend stood in my foyer, his military posture as impeccable as always. The moment he saw me, his professional demeanor softened.
"I came to discuss that security contract," he said loudly enough for anyone listening to hear. Then, more quietly as he followed me back to the study: "Emma filled me in. Are you alright?"
In the privacy of my father's study, I finally allowed myself to crumble. Apollo's arms were around me instantly, strong and steady as I sobbed against his chest.
"She destroyed it," I whispered. "And Stephen just stood there."
Apollo held me until the tears subsided, then stepped back, his hands on my shoulders. His eyes met mine with the same intensity they'd had during our childhood training sessions.
"Finley Armstrong," he said firmly, "you come from a line of warriors who have faced worse battles than this. Your father named you Finley because it means 'fair warrior.' He knew you would need that strength someday."
He gestured to the military medals in their case. "Those aren't just decorations—they're reminders that Armstrongs don't break when they're tested. They become stronger."
The next morning, I sat across from Rebecca Chen in her sleek downtown office. My college friend had transformed into a formidable legal shark, her designer suit and sharp gaze a far cry from our dorm room days.
"So," she said after I'd explained everything, "Stephen Morrison thinks his Harvard Law degree and his mother's rural wisdom trump your family legacy and your own considerable assets?"
She tapped her manicured nails on the folder containing my financial documents. "He's about to learn a very expensive lesson about underestimating an Armstrong woman."
For the first time since the brooch shattered, I felt the ghost of a smile touch my lips. "What's our first move?"
"We build a case so airtight he'll suffocate in it," Rebecca replied, opening her laptop. "And we start by documenting every professional vulnerability he has at that prestigious firm of his."
As she outlined our strategy, I felt my father's strength flowing through me. The Armstrong in me was awake now—and ready for battle.
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