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After the Divorce, He Warned Off Every Man Who Looked at Her

After the Divorce, He Warned Off Every Man Who Looked at Her

Author: Liz Nozick
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Chapter 1 

Word Count: 1571    |    Released on: Today at 17:14

er over the sharp e

to the life she was supposed to have. Bills for the town

ck with the practiced efficiency of

The letterhead was embossed, discreetly expensi

lenched aroun

cked just behind it, peeking out, was a sl

ltra

he shape was small, a ghostly smudge against the dark ba

couldn't control. The paper felt slick and

through the oppressive s

ass front do

didn't need to. The scent of Chanel No. 5

ly lifted

m-colored Chanel suit that screamed of new money and old ambitions. She didn't hesitate, didn't wait for

low, deliberate smile spread across her face. Her hand went to her stomach, which was still perfect

hen back at the woman invading her home. She didn't scream.

ith a soft,

er than a gunshot

oice was level, the same one she used in depositions

ing slightly, a performance for an audience of one. She picked

r voice a syrupy sweet whisper. "Ge

r face, searching. It was the look of a

" Hortense corrected her, her tone still mad

ned, louder this time. "Gerhardt g

y of their home, their life. It had been given away as easily as a cheap trinket. The air left her lungs in a silent rush, leaving a hollow

suffocating. The wa

ctronic lock on the f

swung open fo

it was Gerh

noon light. His custom-tailored suit was immaculate, his face carved

in Brittni, her hand still protectively on her stomach. They took in

n his expression. Only

with a question he refused to answer. She

aid. It wasn't a requ

out a word, he moved. It was a small, almost imperceptible shift

hie

her. From his wif

ion. The hope she hadn't even realized she was still clinging to-a thin, pathetic thread-snapped. Her heart

through those dark weeks afterward, watching him fight for every breath, and in that struggle, she had fallen in love with him. That was the man she married. That was the man she had been clinging to all this time. But standing here now, watching him shield another woman, she finally understood

forcing her spine to straighten. The

ear, sharp, and utterly devoid of emotion. It

ng else. Shock. Anger. Maybe something she couldn't name. His pupils contracted, his gaze locki

eld, his blood soaking into her clothes as he whispered that she would be okay. That memory, once a source of comfort, now felt li

gesturing to the photo on the table, "the 'work' th

ore damning than any word he could have spoken. It was an an

ondescending glances from his family, the iron-clad prenup that treated her like a hostile corporate

e shares. The life she had been forced to build inside this

y. She had already lost him years ago. I

on was ins

t from the back of a sofa. The moveme

low growl. He moved toward her,

as if he were a hot iron, her e

ing him see the absolute finality in her gaze. "My lawyer will have th

er mouth to say something, perhaps a

ng counsel right before she tore their case to shreds on the st

, Hortense walked to the door. Her back was ramrod s

or open, and the cold w

hud of the lock echoing in the sudden sile

hipping at her face, she finally allowed herself to b

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After the Divorce, He Warned Off Every Man Who Looked at Her
After the Divorce, He Warned Off Every Man Who Looked at Her
“For three years, Hortense was trapped in a gilded cage, playing the perfect, submissive wife to billionaire CEO Gerhardt Goodwin. The fragile facade shattered when his mistress, Brittni, waltzed into their Upper East Side townhouse with the front door passcode, flaunting an ultrasound photo of Gerhardt's "heir." When Hortense coldly demanded a divorce, Gerhardt violently refused. He used her sick mother's health insurance to force her compliance and keep her as a prisoner. At the hospital, Brittni deliberately faked a sudden miscarriage to frame her, and Gerhardt looked at Hortense with pure, undiluted hatred. "If anything happens to that baby, I will destroy you." To make matters worse, Clyde Emerson-the psychotic stalker who had once used a legal loophole to terminate Hortense's own pregnancy-suddenly resurfaced, cornering her in a hallway and vowing to claim her. Hortense was suffocating in despair. She had sacrificed her career for a man whose brain injury made him forget she had saved his life, replacing his love with a fabricated, venomous hatred. Why wouldn't her cruel husband just let her go? Why was she being punished and humiliated while he built a new family? The breaking point came when Brittni publicly mocked her for being a "barren, empty vessel." All the pain vanished, replaced by a terrifying, icy resolve. Hortense slapped the mistress hard across the face, filed a unilateral divorce petition despite Gerhardt's furious threats, and made a decisive phone call. "Paul, it's Hortense. I need your help. It's time to come home."”