Her Ex’s Banquet Exposed the Bill His Family Never Paid-kieutrinh

The divorce did not destroy Lena Pierce at 10:17 on that rainy Tuesday morning.

The room tried its best, though.

It smelled like burnt coffee, wet wool, and the sharp lemon cleaner someone had used on the conference table before anyone arrived.

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Rain tapped against the windows of Nolan Pierce’s attorney’s office, soft at first, then harder, like someone outside had grown impatient with the whole performance.

Lena sat with her back straight and a black pen between her fingers.

Across from her, Nolan kept watching her face.

He had always been good at watching when he thought there would be something useful to see.

Tears, maybe.

A trembling hand.

A crack in her voice.

Some small public proof that leaving her for Alina Cross had shattered her the way he had probably described it to himself.

But Lena did not give him any of it.

She signed where the sticky tabs told her to sign.

Initialed where the attorney pointed.

Turned the pages carefully, one after another, while Nolan’s lawyer read the agreement in a voice so flat it made twelve years sound like a cable bill.

The Maple Ridge house would remain Lena’s.

Her retirement accounts would remain hers.

Pierce Catering LLC would remain under her ownership and control.

Nolan would keep his downtown condo, his personal vehicle, and his investment account.

That was when his jaw tightened.

Not when the house was mentioned.

Not when the retirement accounts were mentioned.

The company.

That was what made him react.

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