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Divorcing The Cold Heir: Watch Me Rise

Divorcing The Cold Heir: Watch Me Rise

Author: : Da Lanlan
Genre: Modern
Elena Bailey's marriage to billionaire heir Barrett Harding had never been a love story. It was a cold arrangement wrapped in diamonds, a beautiful ceremony with no marriage inside it. After months abroad, Barrett returned to New York with a lavish yacht party, champagne, cameras, and socialites hanging on his arm. Everyone knew the Harding heir was back. Everyone except his wife. When Barrett finally came home, he treated Elena like an unwanted inconvenience. At a formal family dinner, he humiliated her in front of his parents, and they watched with cold approval, as if his wife were worth less than the servants who whispered about her behind her back. Then, later that night, he pulled over beside a dark highway exit, unclipped her seatbelt, and ordered her out of his car so he could go meet another woman. That was when Elena finally stopped begging for a marriage that had never existed. But one question refused to leave her alone. If the Hardings despised her so much, why had they insisted Barrett marry her in the first place? When Elena confronted her mother-in-law, the always-composed Eleanor Harding finally cracked. "Name your price, Elena. How much will it take for you to sign the NDA and disappear quietly?" Then Eleanor pushed an eight-figure check across the table. Elena looked at the money and understood the truth. She had never been the lucky orphan who married into power. She had been chosen. Used. Buried inside a secret rotten enough to terrify one of New York's most untouchable families. So Elena walked away from the money, ordered her lawyer to serve the divorce papers, and made herself a promise. She would uncover the truth. And when she was done, the Harding empire would burn.

Chapter 1

Barrett Harding was back in New York, and Elena Bailey found out the same way the rest of the city did-from a gossip headline glowing on her phone after a twelve-hour surgery.

His friends knew. The tabloids knew. The women crowding around him in some private club knew. His wife did not.

That was the shape of their marriage in its purest form: public in name, empty in every place that mattered. Barrett Harding had never loved her. He had never been cruel enough to say it plainly, but he had made a life out of proving it.

The surgical mask came off, and the sterile air of the operating room was replaced by the stale, recycled air of her small office.

Elena Bailey leaned her head back against the cool wall, the muscles in her neck screaming after twelve hours hunched over a patient's open chest. A deep, bone-weary exhaustion settled over her, silencing the world. For a few precious moments, there was nothing but the low hum of the hospital's ventilation system.

She reached for her phone, her fingers stiff. The screen lit up, stark and empty.

No new messages.

No missed calls.

Especially none from him. Not from Barrett.

A bitter, silent laugh formed in her throat. She was used to this silence. It had become the defining sound of their marriage.

He had been gone for months on a business trip in Europe, and during that time, their communication had shrunk to practical messages from assistants, forwarded schedules, and the occasional cold confirmation that a wire transfer had been completed. No good mornings. No good nights. No I miss you. Nothing that could be mistaken for a husband remembering he had a wife.

She opened Instagram, hoping a mindless scroll through her friends' lives would numb the familiar ache. A splash of color, a shared meal, a funny video-anything to fill the void.

Then, a notification popped up. A "Close Friends" story from Jessica Yu, her best friend. The photo was dark, blurry, but the caption was sharp and clear.

"Some people are back in town and already causing a scene."

A cold knot tightened in Elena's stomach. A premonition, heavy and unwelcome, washed over her. Her thumb hovered over the screen for a second before she tapped the link Jessica had shared.

It took her to a gossip website, the headline blazing across the screen in a garish font.

"Harding Heir, Barrett Harding, Returns to NYC with a Bang!"

The photo was professionally shot, crisp and vibrant. Barrett, her husband, stood in the center of a laughing crowd at some impossibly chic private club. He held a glass of whiskey, the amber liquid catching the light. He looked relaxed, happy, a smile playing on his lips that she hadn't seen in years.

In the background, a blur of perfectly made-up women watched him with hungry eyes.

Elena's fingertips went numb. She zoomed in, her breath catching. It was him. That face, so intimately familiar and yet, in that moment, the face of a complete stranger.

The article gushed about his return from a months-long business trip in Europe. It detailed how he had booked out the entire club for an impromptu celebration with his friends. It listed the expensive champagne they drank and the influential people who were there.

The article mentioned his company, Apex Holdings. It mentioned his family.

It did not mention his wife. Not once.

Because in Barrett's world, Elena existed only where she was useful: on legal documents, at family dinners, in carefully staged photographs that proved the Harding heir was stable, respectable, and safely married. Outside of that, she was an omission. A quiet room. A name no one bothered to say.

Her phone buzzed in her hand. A text from Jessica.

"Ellie, you okay? I saw this and... damn it."

Elena took a slow, deliberate breath, forcing the air into her tight lungs. Her fingers felt like ice as she typed back.

"I'm fine. Thanks for letting me know."

A lie. She wasn't fine. She was hollow.

She shut off her phone and mechanically packed her bag. Her mind was a blank slate, wiped clean by the shock. She walked out of the hospital, the automatic doors sliding open to release her into the cool New York night. The wind hit her face, a sharp slap that did little to clear the fog in her head.

She should have gone home. Instead, her feet carried her toward Central Park. She walked without purpose, the rhythmic sound of her footsteps on the pavement a strange comfort. The city lights blurred around her, a kaleidoscope of colors that felt a million miles away.

Eventually, the cold seeped through her scrubs. She hailed an Uber, the address to their Upper East Side apartment falling from her lips like a foreign word.

The doorman greeted her with a polite nod. The elevator ride was silent. She stepped into the apartment and was met with absolute darkness.

It was cold. Empty. Exactly as she had left it that morning.

She flicked on a lamp. The soft light illuminated a space that looked more like a showroom than a home. No luggage by the door. No coat slung over a chair. No sign that Barrett had been there. No sign that he was ever coming back.

That, too, was familiar. Their apartment had always looked untouched by marriage. No shared clutter, no careless intimacy, no evidence of two lives tangled together. Barrett's absence did not disturb the place. It completed it.

She sank onto the plush sofa, not bothering to change out of her work clothes. She didn't turn on the TV. She just sat in the suffocating silence and waited.

The antique clock on the mantelpiece ticked, each second a small hammer blow against the quiet. A tiny, foolish sliver of hope flickered within her. Maybe he was just finishing up. Maybe he would come home.

Midnight came and went. He didn't come.

At one in the morning, her hand, acting of its own accord, reached for her phone again. She opened the profile of Spencer Sinclair, one of Barrett's closest friends. He had just posted a new photo.

The party had moved. Now they were on a yacht, the glittering Manhattan skyline behind them. Barrett was in the center of the frame, laughing. And standing next to him, her body angled slightly into his, was a woman Elena recognized as the daughter of another prominent family. She was smiling, her eyes fixed on Barrett.

The cold that had started in Elena's stomach now spread through her entire body, a deep, invasive chill. The last flicker of hope was extinguished.

He had come back to New York. He had opened champagne, filled rooms with laughter, surrounded himself with friends, strangers, and beautiful women. He had given the whole city a version of himself Elena had not been allowed to see.

And he had not sent his wife a single message.

She finally gave up.

She rose from the sofa and walked to her bedroom. The king-sized bed felt vast and empty. She collapsed onto the cool sheets, not bothering to pull back the covers.

She didn't cry. The hurt was too deep for tears. She just stared at the ceiling, the sheer, crushing absurdity of her marriage pressing down on her until she could barely breathe.

Chapter 2

At 5:45 in the morning, Barrett Harding came home.

And he did not come to their bedroom.

The first hint of dawn was filtering through the silk curtains when a sound jolted Elena from a light, restless sleep.

A faint click. The unmistakable sound of a key sliding into a lock.

She sat bolt upright, her heart hammering against her ribs. Her eyes darted to the digital clock on her nightstand.

5:45 AM.

The front door opened, then closed with a soft, careful thud. She held her breath, listening.

Footsteps. Soft, expensive shoes on the polished hardwood floor of the foyer. They paused.

Elena's entire body tensed, waiting for them to turn toward the master bedroom.

They didn't.

The footsteps moved in the opposite direction, down the short hall toward the guest wing. She heard the quiet turn of a doorknob, the whisper of a door opening, and then another soft click as it was closed.

Silence descended once more.

For a few seconds, Elena could not move. She sat rigid in the middle of the bed, one hand clenched in the duvet, staring at the dark line beneath the bedroom door as if it might give her an answer.

He was home. And he had crept into his own apartment like a thief, taking pains to avoid her, to erase his own presence.

No message. No apology. No explanation. Not even the simple decency of walking into the room and acknowledging that his wife had found out about his return from a gossip site.

A wave of nausea washed over her. It wasn't anger, not yet. It was a profound, gut-wrenching humiliation. He hadn't just ignored her; he had made it clear that sharing the same room with her was something to be actively avoided.

The apartment had always been quiet, but that morning the quiet felt deliberate. It had weight. It had teeth. It was the silence of a man who knew exactly how much damage he had done and still chose comfort over accountability.

She threw back the duvet, her bare feet hitting the cold floor. The chill shot up her spine, but it was nothing compared to the ice in her veins.

She didn't go to the guest room. She didn't pound on the door and demand an explanation. What was the point? His actions were explanation enough.

Still, her body betrayed her. She took three steps toward the hall before she stopped herself, one hand pressed against the wall. A ridiculous part of her wanted him to open the door. To say her name. To make one clumsy, insufficient attempt to explain why every stranger in New York had known he was back before she did.

Nothing came from the guest wing.

Instead, she walked to the kitchen and poured herself a glass of ice water, drinking it down in three long swallows. The cold burned her throat, a welcome distraction. She stood there in the dim light, forcing herself to breathe evenly, to think.

She had spent years learning how not to react. Years smoothing over absences, swallowing questions, letting Barrett's indifference pass through the apartment like bad weather. She had mistaken endurance for dignity. She saw that now.

As the sky outside softened from black to gray, she began to move. Out of a deeply ingrained habit, a pathetic attempt to maintain the facade of a normal marriage, she started making breakfast.

Two servings.

The rich aroma of coffee filled the silent apartment. She toasted bread, the slices popping up with a cheerful sound that felt like a mockery. She cracked four eggs into a pan, the sizzle loud in the quiet kitchen.

Every movement felt both automatic and obscene. Coffee the way he took it. Eggs cooked to the precise doneness he preferred. Toast cut diagonally because he had once, years ago, made an absent comment about it. She remembered everything. He remembered nothing.

When everything was ready, she set two places at the marble island. She sat down, staring at the empty stool across from her. The perfectly cooked breakfast on the plate looked obscene.

It was 7:30 AM. The guest room door remained shut.

He would probably sleep until noon, she thought with a detached bitterness. He had perfected the art of avoiding her.

She picked up her phone, the screen still showing the news article from last night. She scrolled through the messages from friends, all variations of "Are you okay?"

She found herself on Spencer's profile again, staring at the yacht photo. She zoomed in on Barrett's face. He looked genuinely happy, a carefree ease in his expression she had never been able to inspire. The woman beside him was laughing, her hand resting lightly on his arm.

Elena's appetite vanished.

There it was, preserved in pixels: the version of Barrett everyone else received. Warm. Effortless. Alive. He had spent the night smiling for cameras and strangers, then slipped into their apartment at dawn as if his own wife were something shameful waiting in the dark.

With methodical movements, she stood up and ate her own breakfast, forcing each bite down. Then, she took Barrett's plate, covered it neatly with plastic wrap, and placed it in the refrigerator.

The gesture was absurd. Preserving a meal for a man who would never come to the table. It was a monument to her own foolishness.

No. Not foolishness. Evidence.

The plate in the refrigerator. The unopened bedroom door. The gossip headline. The yacht photo. The guest room at dawn. One by one, the small humiliations arranged themselves into something undeniable. This was not a marriage suffering through a difficult season. This was a woman keeping house for a man who had already left her in every way that mattered.

She went back to the bedroom and got ready for work. Opening her closet, her eyes fell on the small section of clothes that belonged to him. A few suits, a handful of shirts. A thin layer of dust coated the shoulders of the hangers.

His absence had collected there, gray and soft, on the fabric of suits worth more than most people's rent.

She dressed in her scrubs, staring at her reflection in the mirror. Her eyes were tired, shadowed, but her jaw was set.

Before leaving the apartment, she hesitated. Her feet, against her better judgment, carried her to the guest room door.

She stood there for a long moment, listening.

There was no sound from within. It was as if the door separated not just two rooms, but two different worlds.

Her hand lifted toward the knob. Then stopped.

She could wake him. She could demand the conversation he owed her. She could ask why he had come home like a stranger, why he had smiled for another woman's camera, why he had let his wife become the last person to know anything about him.

But the answer was already in the silence. Barrett did not explain because he did not think she was entitled to an explanation.

She turned away, her resolve hardening with each step she took toward the front door.

As she closed it behind her, the lock clicking into place, she made a decision.

Some things had to be said. This silence had to be broken.

And if Barrett Harding would not come to her as a husband, then tonight she would face him as something else entirely: a woman who had finally run out of reasons to stay quiet.

Chapter 3

The apartment was lit when she returned that evening.

Barrett was lounging on the living room sofa, idly flicking through channels on the massive television. He was still in yesterday's clothes-a rumpled designer shirt and dark trousers. He looked disheveled, but it only seemed to enhance his careless, aristocratic charm.

He heard the door open but didn't look up. His voice, when he spoke, was laced with ice.

"You decided to come back."

Elena paused, her hand on the doorknob. She closed the door quietly and slipped off her shoes. "This is my home, too," she said, her voice steady. "Are you going to explain?"

He finally turned his head, his gray eyes pinning her with a look of pure derision. "Explain what? That I need to report to you when I return to my own country?"

She placed her bag on the console table, refusing to be baited. "That's not what I'm talking about, Barrett. We're married. The whole world knew you were back before I did."

A short, humorless laugh escaped him. He pushed himself off the sofa and walked to the wet bar. "Married?" He poured a measured amount of scotch into a crystal tumbler, his movements smooth and almost lazy. Nothing about him was loud. That was what made him worse. Barrett Harding did not need to raise his voice to make a room feel smaller. "Don't be so naive, Elena. You know exactly what this is."

Just then, a small, furry creature darted out from behind the sofa. A tiny, orange-and-white cat with wide, curious eyes. It trotted over to Elena and rubbed against her ankles, letting out a soft "mew."

For a moment, the sight of him pulled Elena back to the night she had found him. It had been raining behind the hospital, the kind of cold, filthy rain that turned alleyways into rivers of black water. She had just finished another brutal shift when she heard a weak cry coming from beside the dumpsters. The kitten had been curled inside a collapsed takeout box, soaked through, trembling so hard she could feel it in her own bones when she picked him up.

She had told herself she would only take him to the apartment for one night. Just one night, until she could find a shelter with space. But the apartment had been too silent when she came home. Too polished. Too empty. The kitten had stumbled across the marble floor on tiny unsteady paws, climbed into the blanket she left on the sofa, and fallen asleep as if he had already chosen her.

So she had bought a litter box, a bag of kitten food, and a ridiculous little bed he refused to use. For the first time in months, something alive waited for her at the door.

Barrett's movement stilled. His gaze dropped to the cat, and the mocking amusement on his face vanished, replaced by a quiet, undisguised look of revulsion.

"What is that?" he asked. His voice was soft, controlled, and stripped of warmth.

Elena bent down and scooped the kitten into her arms, stroking its soft fur. "His name is Nacho. I found him in the alley behind the hospital last week."

She met his cold stare. "I fired Brenda. I needed the company."

Barrett's eyebrows lifted slightly. "You fired Brenda? Who gave you that authority?"

Elena remembered Brenda standing in the kitchen with her phone tucked between her shoulder and ear, laughing in a low, gleeful voice while she thought Elena was still at the hospital. Poor Mrs. Harding, she had said. The man comes home to New York and still doesn't come home to her. She keeps that mausoleum spotless like it might make him love her.

There had been more. Little details that no employee should have repeated. The separate bedrooms. The untouched dinners. Barrett's empty side of the closet. Elena had stood outside the kitchen, listening until her hands went cold. Then she had walked in, asked for the apartment keys, and told Brenda her final paycheck would be sent by the end of the day.

"She was taking your money to gossip about your marriage," Elena said, her voice unwavering. "I believe that gives me the authority."

His attention returned to the cat. His expression did not sharpen with anger. It closed, layer by layer, until there was nothing human left in it. "So you replaced her with this shedding animal? Did you forget I hate cats?"

Elena's arms tightened around Nacho. "I remember. But you're only here a few times a year. I didn't think it would be a problem."

That was the wrong thing to say.

Barrett set the tumbler down with delicate precision. The soft click of crystal against marble sounded louder than a shout. Then he crossed the room slowly, unhurriedly, his presence gathering pressure with every step.

He looked down at her, his shadow falling over her and the small creature in her arms.

"It's a problem now," he said. His voice remained even, almost bored. He pointed a finger at the cat. "Get it out of my house."

She stared at him, shocked. "What? He's just a kitten."

"I don't want another living thing in this apartment. Especially not that." His tone was absolute, leaving no room for argument.

The cruelty in his eyes made her stomach clench. The image of the breakfast she had so carefully prepared for him flashed in her mind. The plate, still sitting in the cold refrigerator. A symbol of her wasted effort, her wasted hope.

She turned without a word and walked to the kitchen. She opened the refrigerator and took out the plate. The eggs were congealed, the toast limp.

"I made you breakfast this morning," she said, her voice flat. She placed the plate on the counter.

Barrett glanced at it, his lip curling in disgust. "You really think I'd eat that?"

With a flick of his wrist, he pushed the plate aside. It slid across the marble, a piece of egg falling onto the pristine surface, leaving a greasy yellow smear.

That single, dismissive gesture hurt more than any of his words. It was her affection, her care, discarded like trash.

Nacho, sensing the volatile atmosphere, leaped from her arms and scurried under the sofa.

Barrett's cold eyes found hers again. "You have twenty-four hours to get rid of it," he said, his voice quiet enough to be mistaken for indifference. "Or I'll have someone else do it for you."

The threat hung in the air, ugly and clear.

Elena didn't argue. She knew it was useless. He wanted control. He wanted to hurt her. The cat was just a tool.

She looked at him, at the handsome face arranged into a coldness that seemed to come from his very soul. And all the pain, the humiliation, the lonely nights, coalesced into a single, clear thought.

She was done.

"Barrett," she said, her voice devoid of all emotion. "Let's talk about a divorce."

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