My husband, Colton, the Wall Street mogul, slid annulment papers across the table, coldly discarding me and our unborn child. He thought he was getting rid of a useless wife, but he was actually throwing away the secret architect of his entire empire. Now, I'm ready to make him pay for every insult, every lie, and every single secret I've kept. For three years, eight months pregnant, I secretly saved Colton's ten-billion-dollar company from collapse, enduring a cold, transactional marriage. One night, he shattered that illusion, serving annulment papers and callously discarding me and our unborn child. I signed, leaving luxury behind. Exposing his butler's fraud, I escaped. Colton later found his wedding ring gone and, on his desk, my SEC compliance fixes-proof I was his hidden genius. Blindsided, he realized he'd destroyed his own empire. His mother then called, gloating. The injustice ignited a fierce resolve within me. The next morning, I launched Kidd Legal Consulting. I'd use forty-seven folders of Farmer Capital's un-patched loopholes to force a fair settlement, securing my daughter's future.
My husband, Colton, the Wall Street mogul, slid annulment papers across the table, coldly discarding me and our unborn child. He thought he was getting rid of a useless wife, but he was actually throwing away the secret architect of his entire empire. Now, I'm ready to make him pay for every insult, every lie, and every single secret I've kept.
For three years, eight months pregnant, I secretly saved Colton's ten-billion-dollar company from collapse, enduring a cold, transactional marriage.
One night, he shattered that illusion, serving annulment papers and callously discarding me and our unborn child.
I signed, leaving luxury behind. Exposing his butler's fraud, I escaped. Colton later found his wedding ring gone and, on his desk, my SEC compliance fixes-proof I was his hidden genius.
Blindsided, he realized he'd destroyed his own empire. His mother then called, gloating. The injustice ignited a fierce resolve within me.
The next morning, I launched Kidd Legal Consulting. I'd use forty-seven folders of Farmer Capital's un-patched loopholes to force a fair settlement, securing my daughter's future.
Chapter 1
Nora Kidd POV:
The sharp clatter of silver hitting fine porcelain pierced the silence of the dining room.
Colton tossed his steak knife onto the Hermes plate. He didn't just drop it; he threw it. Growing up in the suffocating pressure of the Farmer family, he learned early that manufacturing sudden noise was the easiest way to establish absolute dominance in a room.
I stopped cutting my food and looked up across the three-meter expanse of the cold marble table.
Colton didn't look at my face. He reached into the inner pocket of his custom-tailored suit and pulled out a neatly folded legal document.
He placed his palm flat over it and slid it precisely across the smooth marble. It stopped exactly inches from my water glass.
I looked down. The bold black letters on the cover page screamed up at me: *Pre-Nuptial Agreement Termination and Annulment Decree*.
"There is no point in continuing this marriage," Colton said. His voice was entirely devoid of warmth, as sterile as a hospital corridor.
My left hand moved instinctively, resting over my eight-month pregnant belly. When I was ten, my father kicked my mother out into the street because she was too weak to fight back. My body remembered that trauma. My defensive instincts flared, wrapping around my unborn child like a physical shield.
As if sensing the spike in my heart rate, the baby kicked gently against my palm.
Colton shifted his gaze to the window. He actively refused to look at my stomach. He refused to acknowledge the child that was weeks away from entering this world.
In the dark corner near the hallway, Richard, the British butler, stood perfectly still in the shadows. His cold eyes watched my humiliation. He was Ernestina's spy, making sure her son finally took out the trash.
"You will get the apartment in Brooklyn," Colton stated, his tone strictly transactional. "And two million dollars in severance."
I didn't cry. I didn't scream or demand an explanation. When I cried my eyes out at ten years old, begging my father to stay, it did absolutely nothing. I learned then that tears were a useless currency. I hadn't shed one since.
I simply reached for the Montblanc pen resting near Colton's water glass.
Colton's pupils contracted slightly. He braced his shoulders, clearly expecting a hysterical meltdown. My absolute silence threw him off balance.
I pulled the cap off the pen and flipped to the signature line. I signed my name in one fluid, unbroken motion.
*Scratch. Scratch.*
The sound of the metal nib tearing slightly into the thick paper was the only noise in the cavernous dining room. It sounded incredibly loud.
I slid the signed document back across the marble.
Colton stared down at my signature. His Adam's apple bobbed up and down once. He didn't speak.
I placed both hands flat on the edge of the table and pushed myself up. My movements were slow and deliberate. The heavy, third-trimester weight of my body made standing difficult, my lower back screaming in protest.
Colton's hand twitched. He instinctively reached out across the table to help me, but he caught himself. His arm froze in mid-air, then dropped back to his side.
I didn't give him a second glance. I turned my back on him and walked toward the spiral staircase leading to the second-floor study.
Colton remained frozen in his seat, staring blankly at the empty high-backed chair across from him.
I reached the second floor, pushed open the heavy oak door of the study, and reached behind me to lock it. The deadbolt clicked into place.
I walked straight to the mahogany desk. I bypassed the main drawers and opened the bottom one-the encrypted safe drawer.
Inside lay a signed commercial lease for an office space in the Brooklyn business district. I had signed it three weeks ago.
Beneath the lease sat a stack of papers, two hundred pages thick. It was the final Securities and Exchange Commission compliance amendment for Farmer Capital.
I picked up the SEC documents and slid them into a blank, unmarked manila envelope.
Then, I pulled out my phone. I went to my contacts, selected Colton's private number, and hit block. I did the same for his work number.
I picked up the envelope and walked to the door. I paused with my hand on the brass knob and looked back at the room. This was my cage. This was where I had worked as his invisible ghostwriter for three years.
I squeezed the doorknob, feeling the cold metal ground me. I looked down at my stomach.
"Tomorrow morning, you will get the freedom you want."
He Destroyed His Own Empire's Creator
Sakakawea
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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Chapter 21
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Chapter 22
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Chapter 23
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Chapter 24
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Chapter 25
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Chapter 26
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Chapter 27
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Chapter 28
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Chapter 29
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Chapter 30
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Chapter 31
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Chapter 32
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Chapter 33
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Chapter 34
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Chapter 35
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Chapter 36
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Chapter 37
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Chapter 38
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Chapter 39
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Chapter 40
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