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Divorcing the Disloyal Billionaire CEO Novel Cover

Divorcing the Disloyal Billionaire CEO

For three years, Elara Vance endured a hollow marriage to the distant billionaire Gabriel Thorne. Tired of his cold indifference and the whispers of his affairs, she finally hands him divorce papers to reclaim her freedom. Yet, instead of signing, Gabriel unexpectedly resists the split. As Elara tries to move on, buried secrets resurface, forcing the couple to face the truth of his betrayal and the hidden stakes that could change their lives forever.
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Chapter 1

The system chimed — a clean, bright sound that didn't match anything I felt.

"That's the last one," said Karen, the HR supervisor, pulling the signed clearance form toward her side of the desk. She didn't look up. Her pen scratched a final note in the margin.

I slid my employee badge across the laminate surface. The lanyard coiled behind it like a dead thing.

Karen glanced at the badge, then at me. "You sure about this, Hayley? Mr. Sutton hasn't signed off personally."

"He doesn't need to. The system approved it."

"I know, but—"

"Is there anything else?"

She pressed her lips together. The fluorescent light above us flickered once, casting her face in a brief, sickly yellow. She shook her head.

"Then we're done."

I picked up the cardboard box I'd packed that morning. It was heavier than I expected — four years of a career crammed into twelve inches of space. A ceramic mug. A framed photo I should've thrown out months ago. A dog-eared copy of a project management manual I'd highlighted to death during my first week.

Four years at Sutton Corp. Gone in a chime.

I turned and walked out of the HR office, the box balanced against my hip. The hallway opened into the main floor — rows of glass-walled cubicles, the low hum of keyboards, the smell of burnt coffee from the breakroom.

And voices. Always voices on this floor.

"Did you see the email? Vivien closed the Monarch deal single-handedly."

I kept walking.

"She's unreal. Eric practically handed her the corner office."

My grip tightened on the box.

"Honestly, she's the only reason Q3 didn't tank."

A woman from the analytics team — Priya, I think — caught my eye as I passed. She opened her mouth, then noticed the box. Her gaze dropped. She turned back to her screen without a word.

That was fine. I didn't need a goodbye parade.

Someone near the water cooler laughed. "Vivien Cheney is what happens when talent meets ambition. The rest of us are just filling seats."

I almost stopped. Almost set the box down and told them exactly what Vivien Cheney's "talent" looked like from the inside — the stolen pitch decks, the rewritten credit lines, the way she smiled at Eric while feeding him ideas that had my fingerprints all over them.

But I didn't stop. My shoes kept moving across the polished floor, steady and even.

The elevator bank was empty. I pressed the down arrow and waited. The number above the doors ticked upward — 4, 5, 6 — taking its time, like the building itself wanted one last chance to hold me.

The doors opened. I stepped inside and hit the lobby button.

As the gap between the doors narrowed, I caught a final glimpse of the open floor. Desks, screens, people who hadn't looked up once.

The elevator sank.

Thirty seconds of silence. My reflection stared back at me from the brushed steel doors — dark hair pulled into a low knot, a face that looked more tired than thirty-one should allow. The box sat at my feet.

The lobby was all marble and glass, designed to impress clients who'd never see the rot upstairs. I crossed it without slowing, nodded once to the security guard — Raymond, the only person in this building who'd ever asked how my day was going — and pushed through the revolving door.

Cold air hit me the second I stepped outside. Late October in the city. The wind caught the hem of my trench coat and snapped it sideways. I shifted the box to my other arm and kept moving down the front steps.

The street was loud — cabs honking, a food cart vendor arguing with a delivery driver, someone's Bluetooth speaker bleeding hip-hop from a bench. Friday afternoon. Everyone rushing toward the weekend.

I set the box on a low concrete ledge and pulled out my phone.

The email was right where I'd left it, pinned at the top of my inbox.

*Dear Ms. Henderson,*

*We are pleased to extend a formal offer of employment for the position of Senior Strategy Director at Lumen Partners. Your compensation package, as discussed, reflects a base salary of...*

Double. Exactly double what Sutton Corp had been paying me.

My thumb hovered over the green "Accept" button at the bottom of the screen.

Four years of sixty-hour weeks. Four years of building frameworks that someone else's name got stamped on. Four years of watching Eric Sutton nod along to Vivien's presentations while I sat three rows back, biting the inside of my cheek until I tasted copper.

I tapped Accept.

The confirmation screen loaded instantly. *Welcome to Lumen Partners.*

A breath I didn't know I'd been holding left my chest. I locked the phone and slipped it into my coat pocket.

Done. All of it, done.

The wind picked up again. I grabbed the box, tucked it under my arm, and started walking toward the subway entrance on the corner. Two blocks. Then home. Then a glass of wine and the first Saturday morning in four years where I wouldn't wake up to a 6 a.m. Slack notification from—

My phone buzzed.

Not a text. Not an email. A call. The screen lit up with a name I hadn't expected to see again this soon.

*Eric Sutton.*

I stared at it. The green and red buttons pulsed on the display, patient, waiting.

He never called directly. That was what assistants were for. That was what Vivien was for.

I swiped to answer before I could think better of it. Old habits — the kind that four years of obedience drills into your nervous system.

"Henderson." His voice came through clipped, tight, the way it sounded when a deadline was bleeding out. "I need the Orion file decrypted and on my desk in one hour. The passphrase is in your secure drive. No one else has access."

I stood on the sidewalk, the box digging into my ribs, the city roaring around me.

"Did you hear me? One hour, Hayley."

He didn't know.

Eric Sutton, CEO of Sutton Corp, the man who'd approved every one of my performance reviews and never once read them — he had no idea I'd walked out of his building eleven minutes ago with my badge in a cardboard box.

The wind pressed against my back. A cab blared its horn somewhere behind me.

"Hayley?"

I held the phone to my ear and said nothing.

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