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Divorcing The CEO: I'll Take Your Empire

Chapter 6 6

Word Count: 576    |    Released on: 07/02/2026

d of old money

combat boots with suspicion. The sales clerk, a woman with a fa

he walked straight to t

art st

the gems glowing with a deep, verdant fire under the halogen lights. It

the glass. The cool surface fel

ra said. Her voice

ooked up, b

ch. How mu

orrowed leather jacket. "That is a Victorian original.

wo hundred and fifty thousand. He had sold her last connec

pered fiercely behind her.

?" Isidora asked. "Jus

rning back to her papers. "We only o

bove the d

ra tu

walk

e walked straight to the manager, who ma

's arm and dragged her

's assistant

he reflection in a lar

oice echoing in the quiet shop. "He wants

she had been pun

"Excellent choice.

"Uh, no. Send it to this address." He handed over

pillar until she was c

r mother's heirloo

. A cruelty so preci

whispered, her hands balling int

Harper's wrist.

ith a cold, hard light. "Not here. Not like this

ooch. The emeralds flashed one last tim

ack card. He took

. She smoothed t

The manager was still smi

Her voice was steady. "When

. "Mr. Ferguson doe

ll," Isidora sa

ut of the store. The su

id to Harper on the sidewalk. "He's goin

ck at the shop. Th

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Divorcing The CEO: I'll Take Your Empire
Divorcing The CEO: I'll Take Your Empire
“I spent three years being the perfect wife to tech mogul Cash Ferguson, a forensic accountant playing the role of a low-risk asset to stabilize his public image. My world shattered when I saw a live CNBC broadcast from Sundance showing Cash tenderly hoisting a two-year-old boy onto his hip-a secret son born to a socialite mistress while he was supposedly at a business roadshow. When I confronted him with divorce papers, Cash didn't apologize; he laughed, calling me a "liability" and weaponizing my mother's history of mental illness to claim I was genetically unfit to carry his heir. He didn't just reject the split; he locked the penthouse elevator and froze every one of my accounts, reclassifying me from a wife to a piece of disputed company property. "You came from nothing, Isidora," he sneered, tossing a credit card at me like a leash. "Stop being dramatic. I can afford a pet, but don't think you can survive a day in the real world without my name." The betrayal turned lethal when I discovered Cash had tracked down my mother's stolen emerald brooch-my only connection to my past-and bought it as a gift for his mistress. He was using my trauma and my heritage to decorate the woman who had replaced me in his secret life. I realized then that Cash had made a fatal accounting error: he forgot that I was the one who built his shadow accounts and knew exactly where the fraud was buried. He wanted to treat our marriage like a hostile takeover, so I decided to give him a market correction he would never forget. I escaped down forty flights of stairs with nothing but a burner laptop and a plan to burn his empire to the ground. If he wanted to play dirty, I'd show him what happens when a forensic accountant initiates a liquidation protocol. I'm not just leaving; I'm going to make him crawl.”