Wife Heard The Forged Divorce Plot And Took Back Her Company-kieutrinh

Anna Parker came home from Chicago with a signed contract in her bag and a box of fudge she had bought because her husband once said it tasted like their first good year.

The flight landed early, the partners had canceled dinner, and for the first time in months she let herself imagine surprising Michael Carter like a wife instead of reporting to him like a chairwoman.

Parker Holdings had just survived a brutal financial stretch, and the new contract would relieve enough pressure for everyone to breathe again.

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Anna thought Michael would smile, maybe tease her for arriving without warning, maybe remember that next week would mark ten years of marriage.

She did not call ahead.

That choice saved the company.

The receptionist in the Wall Street lobby stood too quickly when Anna walked in near evening and said Mr. Carter was upstairs with Khloe Smith, his personal secretary.

Anna smiled, told her not to announce anything, and took the elevator to the twenty-sixth floor with the fudge box pressed against her ribs.

The hallway carpet swallowed her steps, which was why she reached the CEO’s office before anyone had time to perform innocence.

The door was open by a crack.

Inside, Khloe stood too close to Michael, adjusting his belt with the ease of a woman who had stopped fearing discovery.

Michael laughed softly and told her to hurry before someone walked in.

Khloe asked if he was suddenly afraid, and Michael leaned close enough for Anna to hear every word.

“Anna still doesn’t know about the forged divorce papers claiming our marriage is already over, so the company is next.”

The box of fudge bent in Anna’s hand.

She knew enough law to know a real divorce could not happen without her being served, appearing, or signing something, which meant Michael had either lied to his mistress with fake papers or prepared a document meant to become a weapon.

Either way, screaming would only warn him.

Anna backed away from the door, entered the emergency stairwell, and called David Hayes, the attorney who had protected her since Parker Holdings was a rented Brooklyn room with bad lights.

She told him to activate the protective trust for her controlling shares, revoke vulnerable signature paths, and audit every agreement connected to Michael’s equity.

David asked once if she was sure.

Anna said yes.

At dawn, the shares Michael wanted most were beyond his reach.

Anna had built Parker Holdings with the house her mother left her, every saved dollar she owned, and loans that kept her awake for years.

Michael had been an unemployed sales manager when she married him, full of soft promises and wounded pride.

When the company grew, she gave him the CEO chair because he hated being called the founder’s husband.

She even gifted him shares so he could walk into rooms without feeling smaller than her.

By nine the next morning, Anna no longer felt generous.

She pushed open his office door and found Khloe perched on the arm of his chair, holding coffee to his mouth.

The cup jumped, coffee hit the carpet, and Michael’s face emptied itself of color.

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