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Million Dollar Hush Money: I Want Divorce

Million Dollar Hush Money: I Want Divorce

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The silence in Sterling Manor wasn't empty; it was heavy, pressing against my eardrums like deep water. I sat on the edge of the oversized velvet sofa, waiting for my husband to return from a "merger closing" that I knew was actually a hotel room. At 2:00 AM, a notification glowed on his forgotten work tablet: "You left your tie on my nightstand. I'll keep it safe for next time. - S." When Ethan finally walked in, he didn't look at me. He just smelled like Serena's signature sandalwood perfume and expensive scotch. He didn't apologize for the infidelity; instead, he transferred a million dollars into my spousal account and told me to go buy some jewelry to keep my mouth shut. I realized then that I wasn't a wife; I was an expensive placeholder. I left my ten-carat diamond ring on the foyer table and walked out into the freezing rain with nothing but a canvas duffel bag. But Ethan wasn't about to let his "ornament" escape so easily. He froze my credit cards, revoked my trust access, and used his billion-dollar influence to blacklist me from every architecture firm in New York City. He even tracked me down to a restaurant where I was playing piano for tips, throwing a stack of hundreds at me in front of his mistress. When I still refused to crawl back to the manor, he played his final, cruelest card. He leaned in and whispered that if I didn't return to his bed, he would stop protecting my brother from a prison sentence he had manufactured himself. I stood there shivering, realizing that every "favor" he'd ever done for my family was actually a shackle. He thought he could buy my soul, my talent, and my silence by holding the people I loved hostage. How could the man I once loved turn into a monster who viewed my life as nothing more than a line item on a balance sheet? I looked him straight in the eye, my voice as cold as the winter air outside. "Make the call, Ethan. Send him to jail. I'd rather visit my brother through plexiglass than spend another night sleeping next to you." I'm done being a victim. I've just walked into the offices of Azure Architects, the only firm in the city Ethan can't bully. I'm not just going to finish my degree; I'm going to help his biggest rival burn his empire to the ground.

Chapter 1 1

The silence in Sterling Manor was not empty; it was heavy, pressing against the eardrums like deep water. Lily Miller sat on the edge of the oversized velvet sofa in the master bedroom, her posture rigid, her spine not touching the cushions. The antique grandfather clock in the hallway chimed two times, the sound vibrating through the floorboards and up into her bare feet. It was two in the morning.

In her hands, she held Ethan's encrypted work tablet. He rarely left it behind, but tonight, in his rush to leave for the "merger closing," he had forgotten it on the vanity. He likely assumed she wouldn't know the passcode. He had forgotten that the code was the date of their first date-a relic of a time when he was sentimental.

The screen glowed with a notification that had bypassed his usual privacy filters, a direct message on a secure channel.

"You left your tie on my nightstand. I'll keep it safe for next time. - S"

It wasn't a careless iCloud sync. It was a deliberate intrusion into her reality. Lily knew the cadence of the text, the proprietary tone. Serena Vance.

Headlights swept across the heavy silk curtains, illuminating the dust motes dancing in the air for a split second before the room plunged back into shadow. The low, guttural growl of a McLaren engine cut abruptly into the silence outside, followed by the heavy thud of a car door.

Lily's heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, trapped bird. She placed the tablet face down on the marble coffee table. Her fingers were trembling. She clasped them together in her lap, squeezing until the knuckles turned white, trying to force the tremors to stop. She needed to breathe. In. Out. But the air in the room felt thin, insufficient.

The bedroom door handle turned with a metallic click that sounded like a gunshot in the quiet room.

Ethan Sterling walked in. He brought the winter chill with him, a cold draft that swirled around his trench coat. He didn't look at her. He didn't look at the bed where she should have been sleeping. He walked straight to the walk-in closet, his movements precise, mechanical.

He smelled of single-malt scotch, the crisp bite of winter wind, and beneath it all, the cloying, sandalwood sweetness of Le Labo Santal 33. Serena's signature scent. It clung to the wool of his coat, an invisible brand.

Lily stood up. Her legs felt numb, as if the blood had drained out of them hours ago. She walked toward him as he emerged from the closet, shrugging off his suit jacket. It was a reflex, a muscle memory honed over three years of marriage. She reached out to take the jacket, to hang it up, to perform the duty of the wife.

"Let me-"

Ethan sidestepped her. He didn't shove her, but the avoidance was so sharp, so deliberate, it felt like a physical blow. He tossed the jacket onto the foot of the bed in a crumpled heap.

"Leave it," he said. His voice was gravelly, devoid of affection, devoid of anger. It was the voice he used for incompetent junior analysts.

Lily's hands remained suspended in the air for a second, grasping at nothing. She slowly lowered them to her sides, her fingernails digging into her palms.

"You're late," she whispered. The words felt jagged in her throat.

Ethan began undoing his cufflinks, tossing them onto the dresser. Clink. Clink. "I had a dinner. A merger closing."

He turned to look at her then. His eyes were the color of steel, cold and impenetrable. He scanned her face, her silk nightgown, her bare feet, evaluating her appearance with the detached scrutiny of an appraiser looking at a piece of furniture that might need reupholstering.

"Why are you still awake?" he asked. It wasn't a question of concern. It was an accusation. "You know I hate coming home to an interrogation."

"I was worried," Lily lied. She wasn't worried. She was dying. Piece by piece, cell by cell, she was disintegrating. "Where did the merger close? The office?"

Ethan's jaw tightened. A small muscle feathered near his ear. He unbuttoned his collar, exposing the hollow of his throat. "Stop it, Lily. You're becoming tedious. Don't overstep your role."

He turned his back on her and walked into the bathroom. The door didn't close all the way. A moment later, the shower turned on, a torrent of water hitting the tiles. He was washing it off. He was scrubbing Serena off his skin so he could sleep in his marital bed.

Lily stared at the jacket on the bed. She took a step closer. She didn't need to lean down; the scent was potent. It was a territorial marker. A neon sign screaming that she was a placeholder.

She sat back down on the bed, feeling the expensive Egyptian cotton sheets bunch beneath her hands. She waited. That was her life now. Waiting for him to come home. Waiting for him to notice her. Waiting for him to love her.

The water stopped.

Ethan walked out with a towel wrapped low around his hips. Water droplets clung to his chest hair, sliding down his defined abs. He was beautiful in a cruel, statuesque way. He tossed the towel onto the floor and climbed into bed, pulling the duvet up to his waist.

He looked at her. For a second, Lily thought she saw a flicker of something-guilt? Exhaustion? But then his hand reached out and grabbed her wrist.

He pulled her down. There was no kiss. No softness. He positioned her body like a mannequin, moving her limbs to suit his comfort. When he entered her, it wasn't lovemaking. It was a transaction. It was a biological release executed with the efficiency of a business deal. He didn't look at her face. He buried his face in the pillow next to her head, his breathing harsh and rhythmic.

Lily stared at the ceiling, at the intricate plaster molding she had restored herself two years ago. She counted the leaves in the pattern. One, two, three. She bit the inside of her cheek until she tasted the metallic tang of blood, just to feel something other than the crushing weight of his indifference.

When it was over, Ethan rolled away immediately. He sat up on the edge of the bed and reached for the pack of cigarettes on the nightstand. The flare of the lighter illuminated his profile, sharp and unyielding. He exhaled a plume of smoke toward the ceiling.

Lily pulled the duvet up to her chin, curling into a ball. A single tear escaped the corner of her eye, tracking hot and fast into her hairline. She wiped it away furiously. She wouldn't give him that satisfaction.

Ethan picked up his phone. His thumbs moved rapidly across the screen.

A second later, Lily's phone buzzed on her bedside table. The vibration rattled against the wood.

She reached for it, her hand shaking. A notification from the bank.

Notification: Deposit to Sterling Family Trust (Spousal Sub-Account). Amount: $1,000,000.00 USD. Authorization Required for Withdrawal.

She stared at the zeros. They blurred together. It was a digital cage. Money she could see, but couldn't touch without his countersignature, without asking permission. It wasn't liquidity; it was a leash.

"Consider it a bonus," Ethan said, his voice flat. He didn't turn around. "You've been... patient lately. Request the authorization tomorrow. Go buy yourself some jewelry. Or send it to your parents. I know your father is looking for a new investment round."

The air left Lily's lungs. It wasn't a gift. It was payment. It was hush money. It was a fee for services rendered. He was paying her for the sex, for the silence, for the humiliation of smelling another woman on him.

She felt bile rise in her throat. The million dollars didn't make her feel rich. It made her feel like the most expensive whore in New York City.

"Ethan," she said, her voice barely a whisper.

"I'm sleeping in the guest room," he said, standing up. He stubbed out the cigarette and didn't look back. "I have an early meeting. Don't wake me."

The door closed behind him.

Lily looked at the phone screen again. The blue light illuminated her face in the dark room. Something inside her chest, a tension wire that had been pulled taut for three agonizing years, finally snapped. It didn't make a sound, but the recoil hit her with physical force.

She placed the phone face down. She didn't cry. The tears had dried up. In their place was a cold, hard clarity.

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