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

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 1177    |    Released on: Today at 17:13

dancing in the air. The light felt like an intrusion. Hortense moved with a stiff, deliberate slown

He was dressed for the office, reading the Wall Street Journal as if noth

difference sent a fresh wa

d began placing her work clothes inside. A navy

r voice dripping with venom. She deliberately kicked the leg of a floor lam

ed the page. The rustle of newsprint was the only r

shatter his composure. "Or are we just not talking

of any emotion. "Sign the divorce papers, Gerhardt," she sai

utterly final. "You're not going anywhere." He added, his tone laced with a casual cruelty, "I

ying on the table beside him, be

it

. The cold indifference vanished, replaced by a flicker

to grab a coat. He just walked out of the room, leaving her st

he bed. In his haste, he'd left something behind

cked it up. With numb

of brilliant, cornflower-blue sapphires, with a massive, square-cu

r third weddin

ng's ransom in jewels while rushing off to the side of his pre

, silver wastebasket in the corner. Without a moment's hesitation, she

ed on her coat, and walked out o

work was a comfort. The logic of legal briefs, the cold, hard facts

t of coffee and old paper a welcome balm, w

Hatfield?" a fra

Who is

, Amiyah Powell, has been admitted to the

documents on her desk blurred into an in

you should come a

ed her purse, her half-finished coffe

chines, hurried footsteps, and the low murmur of pain. Hortense stood

ng on the linoleum floor. As she rounded a

p and her bl

s Bri

d resting on her stomach. A private nurse hovered at he

m lit up her eyes, quickly veiled

g with fake sympathy. She glanced pointedly at the red light glow

said, her voice a low growl. The smel

nse's personal space. She idly touched her own neck, dr

a conspiratorial hiss. "He came over to my place afterwards.

ge the lie conjured, the casual claim on her husband's violence, made her s

ng. "He's so sweet. He's gone to get me a croissant from that little Frenc

f you say one more word," she said, her voice deadly calm, "m

on Hortense's raw nerves. "A lawsuit? From a woman

t to respond, the door to

bs stepped out. "Fami

ly shifting. The petty drama with Brittni e

r," she said, ru

triumphant smile on her face. She pulled out

s way up.

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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."”