Anniversary Divorce: My Queen's Rise

Anniversary Divorce: My Queen's Rise

Jillian Chinnici

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My husband handed me divorce papers on our anniversary. It was a "temporary maneuver," he said, to appease his pregnant mistress until she gave birth to his heir. Then he left me to die in a storm and forced me to give my blood to save her, threatening my parents' graves when I refused. He called me a "blood bag" and expected me to wait patiently for his return. He thought he knew his practical, loving wife. He was about to meet the queen who would take his crown, his company, and his entire world.

Chapter 1 Chapter 1

My husband handed me divorce papers on our anniversary. It was a "temporary maneuver," he said, to appease his pregnant mistress until she gave birth to his heir.

Then he left me to die in a storm and forced me to give my blood to save her, threatening my parents' graves when I refused.

He called me a "blood bag" and expected me to wait patiently for his return.

He thought he understood his pragmatic wife who loved him deeply.

But today, he was about to meet the queen-the one who would take his crown, his company, and his entire world.

Chapter 1

Aimee Ramirez POV:

My husband handed me divorce papers on the fifth anniversary of our company's founding, in the penthouse apartment our success had bought. He called it "a temporary legal maneuver."

"I don't understand," I whispered. The words felt foreign, scraped from a stranger's throat. My eyes were fixed on the bold text: Petition for Dissolution of Marriage. Below, our names-Kyle Lopez and Aimee Ramirez-were printed in a font that was cold, clean, and final.

Kyle loosened his tie, a gesture of casual disinterest, as if he were discussing a minor dip in quarterly earnings. "It's quite simple, Aimee. Karma is pregnant."

The name landed like a fist to the solar plexus. Karma Wells. His executive assistant, barely old enough to rent a car. The air evacuated my lungs in a single, painful rush. The crystal champagne flutes, the panoramic view of the city we had conquered, Kyle's handsome, treacherous face-it all blurred into a nauseating smear of light and lies. Five years. Five years of late-night coding sessions, shared takeout containers, and whispered dreams. A partnership. A love story. A fiction I had written and starred in all by myself.

"Pregnant?" The word was a shard of glass in my throat. "You... you told me you didn't want children. We agreed. Because of my condition." My inability to carry a child to term. A wound so deep we had architected our entire future around it. He had held me through the grief, swearing that I, my mind, our partnership, was all he would ever need.

He had the decency to look away, his gaze dropping to the flickering candlelight between us. "People change."

"A temporary maneuver," I repeated, the phrase tasting like ash. My mind was a frantic scramble, trying to find a foothold in a reality that was crumbling beneath me. This was a strategy. A cruel, elaborate play to manage an unstable mistress. "You want me to sign this as a formality? To placate her?"

"Exactly," he said, a small, relieved smile touching his lips. He thought I understood. He leaned forward, his voice dropping into the low, persuasive cadence he used to charm investors. "She needs to feel secure. A contract. Once the baby is born and a proper trust is established, we tear this up. Nothing really changes between us, Aimee. You'll still be my partner. My wife, in every way that matters."

I stared at him, searching for the man I married. The one who once traced the faint scar on my palm and called it the first line on the map of our shared empire. He was gone. A cold, calculating stranger wore his face. "You want me to divorce you, so you can marry her, have her child, and then you expect me to just... wait for you to come back?"

"She's young, Aimee. A bit volatile. This is a practical solution," he explained, completely deaf to the hurricane of my breaking heart. "Think of it as a strategic investment in stability. We can't have a scandal tanking the stock, not with the acquisition pending."

"So I'm a line item in your risk management portfolio?"

"Don't be dramatic." He reached across the table, his hand covering mine. His touch, once my sanctuary, felt like the closing of a cage. I snatched my hand back as if burned.

A flicker of annoyance crossed his face. "Aimee, we built this company. You and I. That doesn't change."

"Everything just changed!" My voice cracked, the sound unnaturally loud in the opulent silence. "You're having a baby with another woman! You're asking me for a divorce! What part of our life hasn't changed?"

He sighed, a sound of profound impatience. "I knew you'd be emotional. Look, in a year, maybe two, I'll arrange a quiet divorce from her. I'll provide for them, of course. Then you and I can remarry. It's clean."

A horrifying clarity began to crystallize from the chaos in my mind. "And what happens to her? To your child? Are they just another temporary maneuver?"

He shrugged, a gesture of such supreme indifference it chilled me to the bone. "She'll have a settlement that will set her up for life. The kid will have a trust fund. It's what men in my position do. It's pragmatic." He leaned back, the picture of detached reason. "And to show my commitment to our partnership, I'm not contesting the asset division. You keep your full fifty percent of the company. You can move into the waterfront condo. It's a good deal."

A good deal. He was liquidating our marriage like a failing asset. The kind, brilliant man I loved hadn't been corrupted by success; he had been revealed by it. This cold, ruthless strategist was the real Kyle Lopez.

"What did you expect, Kyle?" I asked, my voice suddenly, eerily calm. "Did you expect me to thank you for the generous terms of my own destruction?"

"I expected you to be smart," he snapped, his patience gone. "I expected you to understand what's at stake. I still love you, Aimee. You're the only woman I've ever seen as my equal."

The memory of him whispering those same words on our honeymoon, a promise under a canopy of stars, was a fresh stab of pain. He loved my mind, my ambition, my utility. He loved me like a well-designed piece of software. He had never loved my soul.

"You're right," I said, my voice flat, dead. "It's a very good deal."

I picked up the heavy, gold-plated pen he'd placed beside the papers. He watched me, a smug smile of victory ghosting on his lips. He thought he'd won. He thought I would fold, as I always did, for the good of the company. For the good of us. He had no idea that the entity he called 'us' had just been pronounced dead.

As my fingers closed around the pen, his phone buzzed on the table. He glanced at the screen, and his entire face transformed. The cold CEO melted away, replaced by a look of such tender, unguarded concern it stole the breath from my lungs.

"Hey, baby," he murmured into the phone, his voice a soft caress. "No, of course you're not bothering me. What's wrong? Is the cramping back?"

I watched, paralyzed, as he listened, his brow furrowed with a worry he hadn't shown for me in years. He was looking at his phone, but he was seeing her. His new family. The one that mattered.

"The doctor said what? No, don't panic. Stay right where you are. I'm on my way." He stood, pocketing his phone, his focus already a thousand miles away. He was already gone.

He paused at the door, turning back as if recalling a minor loose end. "Just sign it, Aimee. We'll talk tomorrow. Wait for me here."

The door clicked shut, leaving me alone in the wreckage. The untouched anniversary dinner sat on the table, a mockery of a life I no longer had.

Wait for me here.

A bitter, hysterical laugh clawed its way up from my chest. It was the sound of a queen realizing her kingdom was, and always had been, a prison.

I didn't wait. I took the divorce papers, my purse, and the gold-plated pen, and walked out of that penthouse. I left the candles to burn down over the tomb of our marriage.

I drove not to a lawyer, but to a place he didn't know existed: a small, sound-proofed office I'd leased under a shell corporation two years ago. My failsafe. The city lights blurred past, no longer a symbol of our shared victory, but the battleground on which I would take back my life.

I spread the papers on the cold, steel desk. There was no going back. Kyle had just handed me a declaration of war. And he had no idea that I was the one who had secretly written the rules of engagement.

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