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The divorce he never saw coming
img img The divorce he never saw coming img Chapter 5 THE INJUNCTION
5 Chapters
Chapter 6 The Boardroom Battlefield img
Chapter 7 The Shadow in the Wings img
Chapter 8 The Blind Side img
Chapter 9 The Enemy of My Enemy img
Chapter 10 The Price of the Throne img
Chapter 11 The Basement of Secrets img
Chapter 12 The Inheritance of Regret img
Chapter 13 The Stranger in the Mirror img
Chapter 14 The Final Cross-Examination img
Chapter 15 The Silent Listener img
Chapter 16 The Amnesia Trap (Extended) img
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Chapter 5 THE INJUNCTION

Julian didn't sleep. He spent the night pacing the empty penthouse, the silence of the rooms mocking him. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw the curve of Lia's signature next to his own. It was a perfect trap, designed by the one person he thought was too simple to play the game.

By 8:00 AM, he was at the front door of Lia's sister's modest suburban home. He didn't knock; he pounded.

"Lia! Open the door!" he roared. "I know you're in there. Stop this ridiculous charade!"

The door opened, but it wasn't Lia. Her sister, Sarah, stood there with her arms crossed, her eyes flashing with a coldness that mirrored the look Lia had given him in the lobby.

"She's not here, Julian," Sarah said, her voice dripping with venom. "And even if she were, she's the last person on earth who wants to see your face."

"Don't lie to me, Sarah. She has nowhere else to go. Tell her to come out now, or I'll have this entire property tied up in litigation before lunch."

Sarah laughed, a harsh, dry sound. "You still don't get it, do you? You're the big, bad lawyer, but you're the one standing on the porch while she's already gone. You spent three years making her feel like a ghost, Julian. Well, congratulations. She finally turned into one."

"I'm not leaving," Julian hissed, stepping closer.

"Actually, you are." Sarah reached behind the door and pulled out a thick envelope. She didn't hand it to him; she dropped it at his feet. "Consider yourself served. Again."

Julian stared at the envelope. His name was printed on the front in bold, professional lettering. He ripped it open, his eyes scanning the legal jargon with the speed of a machine.

Temporary Restraining Order. Domestic Litigation: Emotional Abuse and Coercive Control.

Julian felt the air leave his lungs. "Emotional abuse? I never laid a hand on her!"

"There are many ways to break a person, Julian," Sarah said, stepping back and beginning to close the door. "Starving her of affection, forcing her to hide her identity, making her eat food that made her sick just because you couldn't be bothered to remember her health... that's abuse. And now, if you come within a hundred yards of her, you'll be sitting in a cell instead of a courtroom."

The door slammed shut.

Julian stood on the porch, the papers fluttering in the morning breeze. He felt a sudden, sharp pain in his chest. It wasn't a heart attack; it was the crushing weight of public humiliation. If this restraining order went public, his career was over. A divorce lawyer accused of mistreating his own wife? The press would tear him apart.

He turned back to his car, his mind racing. He needed to find her. Not to bring her back not yet but to stop her from destroying him.

Lia's New Reality

On the other side of the city, I walked into the lobby of Osborne & Co. Financial. It was a bold move. Elizabeth's family owned this firm, but Julian didn't know that I had applied for a senior analyst position here months ago under my maiden name. He had never bothered to learn my professional background, so he had no idea I was a top-tier financial strategist.

I was wearing a sharp, tailored navy suit. My hair, which I usually wore in a plain bun to satisfy Julian's "minimalist" taste, was down in soft, confident waves. I looked like a woman who owned the world.

"Ms. Leighton? The CEO is ready to see you," the receptionist said with a smile.

I walked into the corner office. Elizabeth Osborne sat behind the desk, looking over some files. She looked up, and for a split second, I saw a flicker of recognition in her eyes. She had seen me for two seconds in the lobby yesterday, but back then, I was a "client." Today, I was her potential new hire.

"Lia Leighton," Elizabeth said, standing up to shake my hand. "Your resume is the most impressive I've seen in years. But I have to ask... why here? With your credentials, you could work anywhere in the world."

I smiled, a cold, calculated glint in my eyes. I knew Elizabeth was using Julian to get her own divorce settled. I knew she was the woman who had lived in my husband's heart while I lived in his house.

"I like a challenge, Ms. Osborne," I said smoothly. "And I've recently learned that the best way to get what you want is to make sure you're the one holding all the cards."

Elizabeth smiled back, unaware that she was sitting across from the woman whose life she had helped ruin. "I like your spirit. Consider yourself hired. We have a big merger coming up with a law firm. Perhaps you've heard of them? Cohen & Associates."

The room seemed to shrink. My heart skipped a beat, but my face remained a mask of professional calm.

"I've heard of them," I said, my voice like velvet. "I look forward to working on that account."

I walked out of the office an hour later, my blood humming with adrenaline. I wasn't just escaping Julian anymore. I was moving into his territory. I was going to be the financial lead on his firm's biggest merger.

In thirty days, he wouldn't just be my ex-husband. He would be my subordinate.

As I reached my car, my phone buzzed. It was a restricted number. I knew it was him.

I didn't block it. I answered.

"Lia," Julian's voice came through the line, sounding ragged, desperate, and furious all at once. "You think you're smart? You think this little restraining order is going to stop me? You're playing a dangerous game, and you're going to lose."

I leaned against my car, looking up at the high-rise building where I now worked.

"Julian," I said, my voice calm and low. "You're the expert on divorce, right? So you should know the first rule of a losing case."

"What's that?" he spat.

"Know when to settle," I replied. "Because by the time I'm done with you, you won't even have a reputation left to save."

I hung up and tossed the phone onto the passenger seat.

The game hadn't just changed. I had flipped the board.

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