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The CEO's Final Gift

Chapter 5 No.5

Word Count: 723    |    Released on: 22/08/2025

party was the t

d their new empire. Karissa saw it splashed across every financial news site and s

eeting at the company her father had built. It

o jewelry except for her mother's simple gold watch. She was no

ll eyes were on her. The silence was

en her father's. Hettie was beside him, not on the board yet,

y outlined his vision for the Kennedy Corporation. He was sharp, brilliant even. He had learned well. A

ed, her expression placid. This was her goodbye. A s

people were filing out

to you," he sa

her's old office. The view of th

side for years, secretly attacking my side projects. I know he did it for you. As a gesture of goodwill, I'm not going to press charges. And I've arranged a posi

her future, assuming she had nowhere else to go, no other optio

ht had turned to stone, fe

out the window. It had started t

knock. She wrapped her arms around Brady

e? Everyone is waitin

own. And around her neck was Karissa's necklace. The one fro

profane desecrat

g. Just a profound,

dy," she said, her voice even

d walked towa

her, a hint of annoyance in his voi

the door but d

own harder now, lashi

ed out of the office, out of the building, and into the

lt cleansing. It was washing away the last four years. Washing away the scent of l

in dripping down her face like tears. I am not his p

o the sky, letting th

m f

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The CEO's Final Gift
The CEO's Final Gift
“For four years, I was a ghost in my own home, trapped in a loveless marriage to a man who despised me. The entire house smelled of lilies-the favorite flower of Hettie, his childhood sweetheart. The day she came back into his life, he tossed divorce papers at me. He demanded my family's company as his compensation and announced that Hettie was carrying his child. In a last, desperate attempt to hold on, I lied and told him I was pregnant, too. He just laughed and called me a pathetic liar. That night, he brought her to our home for dinner. He asked me not to wear my late mother's perfume because Hettie was allergic. He was asking me to erase the last piece of my mother for her. Then I saw it. Around Hettie's neck was the diamond necklace Brady had given me for our first anniversary. The doctors had already warned me that with my terminal illness, I didn't have much time left. That single, cruel act was the final blow. The last bit of love I had for the boy who once promised to protect me died completely. I walked over to the table and calmly signed the divorce papers. Then, I picked up my phone. "Darcy," I said to my lawyer, my voice steady. "I'm transferring all of my shares to Brady Kennedy. Make it effective immediately."”