He Forged Our Divorce, But My 59% Shares Were Already Locked-kieutrinh

I came back to New York one day early because the Chicago contract had closed faster than anyone expected, and I still believed good news belonged first to the husband waiting in my office tower.

The box of fudge in my bag was ridiculous, almost childish, but Michael had loved that flavor on our first anniversary, and I wanted to remind him that we had once been simple.

Parker Holdings had not begun as a glass building on Wall Street, or a boardroom full of lawyers, or a logo glowing above a lobby desk.

Image

It began in a cramped Brooklyn office I rented after selling the only inheritance my mother left me, while Michael promised that one day he would repay every ounce of faith I placed in him.

Back then, he was unemployed, charming, and embarrassed by how naturally people called me the founder.

I gave him dignity before he earned power, and later I gave him the CEO title because I thought marriage meant lifting the person beside you.

The receptionist looked startled when I stepped into the lobby and asked her not to announce me.

I thought she was nervous because a chairwoman coming back early can scramble a schedule, but now I know guilt has a weather of its own.

The twenty-sixth floor was quiet enough for me to hear laughter through Michael’s office door.

The door had been left open by a careless inch, and through it I saw Khloe Smith close beside him, smoothing his shirt with the comfort of a woman who had done it many times.

Michael laughed and told her not to worry because his wife still did not know about the divorce papers.

The sentence did not make sense at first, because I had never been served, never signed anything, and never stood before a judge.

Then it made a colder kind of sense, the kind that arrives when love has to admit it has been living beside fraud.

I backed away without entering, because I did not want my first move to be a scream he could use against me.

In the emergency stairwell, with the city humming beyond a small square window, I called David Hayes and told him to activate the protective trust around my 59% controlling shares.

David had drafted that mechanism years earlier, back when I scolded him for being too cautious with a man I loved.

By morning, I understood that good lawyers are sometimes the only witnesses to the truth you refuse to see.

When I returned to the office at nine, Michael was feeding off the illusion that his throne still existed.

Khloe was perched on the armrest of his chair with a coffee cup near his mouth, and both of them reacted to me as if I had entered through a wall.

I asked for black coffee, no sugar, no milk, and Khloe looked to Michael before moving.

That tiny glance told me how long she had been practicing ownership over a room my money built.

Michael tried the old performance first, the soft concern, the tired smile, the question about why I had not called him from the airport.

I let him speak until I mentioned the divorce papers, and the color fell out of his face so quickly that I knew the lie had bones.

That evening, I made him meet me at his mother’s estate in Greenwich, a house I had paid for after our first major contract.

Helen Carter opened the door wearing the pearls I bought her and the expression of a woman who still believed gratitude could be performed for profit.

She tried stew, sweetness, and motherhood before she gave up and showed me the contempt underneath.

When I asked about the forged decree, Helen said the Carter family could not let its bloodline end, and if I could not give Michael children, I needed to know my place and step aside.

For one breath, I was back in the hospital after the miscarriage, waiting for Michael while he entertained investors.

Then I looked at the woman wearing my pearls in a house bought with my money and called David on speaker.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *