Emmanuel stared at the closed study door for a full minute. His cheek still stung, and his pride was wounded far worse.
He stormed into the master bedroom, ripping off his tie and throwing it on the floor. He yanked open the closet door to change his shirt.
He stopped.
The left side of the closet was empty.
The rows of dresses, the shoe racks, the organized shelves of handbags-all gone. Only the bare wooden hangers remained, swinging slightly from the draft.
A cold knot formed in his stomach. He turned and walked back out to the living room. The front door was still closed. She hadn't left.
Then where were her clothes?
He found her standing in the center of the living room, a manila folder on the coffee table in front of her.
"Are you moving your clothes to the guest room?" he asked, his voice dripping with sarcasm. "Because that's the most childish thing you've-"
"Sit down, Emmanuel."
Fiona's voice was different. It was quiet, stripped of all the emotion, the anger, the hurt. It was the voice of a stranger.
He didn't sit. He walked over to the coffee table and looked down at the folder.
"What is this?"
"Open it."
He picked up the folder and flipped it open.
The words at the top of the first page hit him like a physical blow.
PETITION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE.
He stared at it, his brain struggling to process the words. He flipped through the pages. She was asking for nothing. No alimony. No property. No shares. Just her personal belongings and a clean break.
He let out a bark of laughter, but there was no humor in it. He threw the folder back onto the table, the papers scattering.
"You've lost your mind." He looked at her, his eyes hard. "You think this is a negotiation? You think you can scare me with this?"
"It's not a negotiation," Fiona said. "It's a notification."
Emmanuel stepped closer, using his height to loom over her. "I am not signing this."
"You don't have to. New York is a no-fault state. I can file regardless."
"It takes a year to finalize a contested divorce," he shot back. "And I will contest it. You're not going anywhere."
Fiona didn't back down. She looked up at him, her gaze unflinching. "I was pregnant, Emmanuel."
The words hung in the air between them.
Emmanuel's expression hardened. "We're not doing this again."
"I was pregnant," she repeated, her voice rising. "I was carrying your child. And I lost it. While I was lying on that floor, bleeding out, you were holding Carley Marshall's hand."
"She was in the hospital!" he roared, his control snapping. "There was no baby! You made it up to manipulate me, just like you're trying to manipulate me now with this ridiculous document!"
"I was at Lenox Hill last night," Fiona said, her voice shaking with suppressed rage. "I had a D&C. I lost our baby."
"If you were really in the hospital, where are the bills? Where are the discharge papers?"
"The proof exists, Emmanuel," Fiona said, her voice eerily calm as she slid the hospital discharge paper from the back of the folder. She flipped it over, revealing the single sentence she had written on the back in the hospital bed: I, Fiona Miller, am taking my life back. "But I've realized it doesn't matter. You wouldn't believe the truth even if it was printed on hospital letterhead. I'm done trying to make you see me."
"Because it doesn't exist!" He stepped back, running a hand through his hair. "Do you think I'm stupid? Do you think I don't know when you're playing games?"
"I am not playing a game!" Fiona screamed, the sound tearing from her throat. "I lost a child! Our child! And you didn't even care enough to listen!"
"Even if it was true," Emmanuel said, his voice dropping to a cold, deadly whisper, "which it isn't, I never wanted a kid with you anyway."
The words hit Fiona like a sledgehammer to the chest.
The air left her lungs. The room tilted sideways.
"What did you say?"
"You heard me." He crossed his arms over his chest, his posture defensive, arrogant. "A clump of cells is not a child. And I certainly wouldn't want one with a woman who uses it as a bargaining chip."
Fiona stared at him. The man she had loved for three years. The man she had built a life with. The father of the child she had lost.
He was a monster.
The last flicker of warmth in her eyes died. It was like watching a candle being snuffed out, leaving only cold, dark ash.
She reached into her bag and pulled out a pen.
She picked up the divorce papers from the table. She didn't read them. She didn't hesitate. She signed her name at the bottom of every page with sharp, angry strokes.
She slammed the pen down on the table and shoved the papers toward him.
"Sign it."
Emmanuel looked at the papers, then at her. The coldness in her eyes unsettled him. This wasn't the Fiona he knew. The Fiona he knew cried. She begged. She compromised.
This woman looked at him like he was dirt on her shoe.
"No," he said, but his voice was less certain.
Fiona turned around and grabbed the handle of her suitcase, which was waiting by the door.
"Where are you going?" Emmanuel asked, panic creeping into his voice.
"Away from you."
He lunged forward, grabbing her arm just above the elbow. His grip was bruising, his fingers digging into her skin.
"You walk out that door, and you are never coming back." His voice was a low threat. "I mean it, Fiona. No more games. You leave, and you're dead to me."
Fiona looked down at his hand on her arm, then back up at his face.
"Let go of me."
"Are you listening to me?"
"I said, let go!" She wrenched her arm free, her eyes blazing. "You think this is a game? You think I'm doing this for attention? I would rather sleep on the street than spend one more night under the same roof as you."
She yanked the front door open and dragged her suitcase across the threshold.
"Fiona!" Emmanuel shouted.
She stepped into the hallway and pressed the button for the elevator.
Emmanuel stood in the doorway, his chest heaving. "Don't you dare get in that elevator!"
The doors dinged open. Fiona stepped inside. She turned around to face him.
She didn't say a word. She just looked at him with those cold, dead eyes.
The doors slid shut, cutting her off from his view.
Emmanuel stood in the empty doorway, staring at the closed metal doors. The silence of the apartment pressed in on him.
He walked back inside and looked at the coffee table. The signed divorce papers sat there, a stark white testament to his failure.
He picked them up, his hands trembling slightly.
She was gone.
One week.
It had been one week since Fiona walked out, and Emmanuel felt like he was losing his mind.
He sat at his desk in the corner office of the Meyers Group headquarters, staring at the contract in front of him. The words blurred together, meaningless.
He signed his name on the wrong line.
"Sir?" Alex, his assistant, hovered nervously by the door. "Is everything alright?"
Emmanuel threw the pen down. "Get me a new copy."
"Yes, sir." Alex scurried out of the room.
Emmanuel leaned back in his chair and rubbed his eyes. He hadn't slept properly since that night. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw the look on Fiona's face. That cold, dead stare.
It unsettled him more than her tears ever had.
He picked up his phone and opened his messages. Still nothing from her. He had texted her twice since she left, short, commanding messages.
Come home.
This is ridiculous.
Both had been left on read.
His phone buzzed. It was Alex.
"Sir, a courier just delivered something for you. It's marked urgent."
"Send it in."
Alex walked in a moment later, holding a thick manila envelope. He placed it on the desk and backed out of the room quickly.
Emmanuel stared at the envelope. The return address was a law firm he didn't recognize.
He picked up his letter opener and sliced it open.
He pulled out the stack of papers inside.
SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT FOR DIVORCE.
The words were printed in bold, black letters at the top of the page.
This wasn't a petition. This was a lawsuit.
He flipped through the pages, his eyes scanning the legal jargon. Irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. No fault. No alimony. No property division.
She was serious. She was actually suing him for divorce.
A red haze descended over his vision.
He gripped the edge of the desk, his knuckles turning white. He stood up abruptly, his chair rolling back and hitting the wall.
He grabbed the sheaf of papers and hurled them across the room.
They hit the wall and scattered, fluttering to the floor like dead leaves.
"Damn it!" he roared.
He grabbed his phone and dialed her number. It rang once. Twice. Three times.
"Hello."
Her voice was flat, devoid of any warmth.
"What the hell is this?" Emmanuel demanded, his voice shaking with rage. "You're suing me?"
"It's the next step," Fiona said calmly.
"You think you can just file a lawsuit and walk away? You're my wife, Fiona. You belong to me."
"I don't belong to anyone. Especially not you."
"Stop being so stubborn." He paced behind his desk, his free hand clenching into a fist. "Come home. Now. We can talk about this."
"There's nothing to talk about."
"Fiona, I'm warning you. Don't push me."
"What are you going to do, Emmanuel?" Her voice was laced with a bitter sarcasm. "Ground me? Take away my allowance? Oh, wait. I already cut up the credit cards."
He stopped pacing. "You did what?"
"I cut up the cards. I closed the joint accounts. I don't want your money."
"You think you can survive without my money?" He laughed, a harsh, cruel sound. "You're an archives clerk, Fiona. You dust old papers for a living. You can't even afford a studio apartment's rent in this city on that pathetic salary."
"Then I'll live in a cardboard box. It would still be better than living with you."
The contempt in her voice was a physical blow. It ignited something dark and possessive inside him.
"Is there someone else?" he asked, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper.
Silence on the other end.
"Are you cheating on me?" he pressed, his grip on the phone tightening. "Is that what this is about? You found some other poor sap to leech off of?"
"There is no one else," Fiona said, her tone weary.
"Then why? Why are you doing this?"
"Because the thought of touching you makes my skin crawl." The words were quiet, but they hit him with the force of a freight train. "Because the only man I've ever been with is you, and the very idea of you makes me sick to my stomach."
The line went dead.
Emmanuel stared at the phone in his hand. The screen displayed "Call Ended."
He threw the phone at the wall. It hit the drywall with a crack, leaving a dent before clattering to the floor.
"Alex!" he bellowed.
The door opened instantly. Alex stood there, his face pale.
"Find her," Emmanuel said, his chest heaving. "Find out where Fiona is staying. Now."
"Sir, I tried tracking her credit cards, but they've all been canceled. The bank said she removed herself from all the joint accounts yesterday."
Emmanuel froze. "She what?"
"She has no active accounts linked to the Meyers estate. I can't trace her through the financial system."
A cold, creeping sensation crawled up Emmanuel's spine. She had cut the cord. She had severed the lifeline he had used to control her for three years.
"She thinks she's clever," Emmanuel said, a cruel smile touching his lips. "She thinks she can just disappear."
He walked around the desk and looked out the window at the city below. Millions of people, and one of them was his wife. His wife, who was trying to leave him.
"Freeze her out," he said quietly.
"Sir?"
"Call the co-op boards. The country clubs. Any organization she's a part of. Make it known that Fiona Meyers is not to be extended any privileges."
Alex shifted uncomfortably. "Sir, that's-"
"Do it." Emmanuel turned back to the window. "And call the legal department. Tell them to contest the divorce. File every motion possible. Drag this out. I want this to take years."
"Yes, sir."
Alex left the room.
Emmanuel stood alone in the silence of his office. He pressed his forehead against the cool glass of the window.
He closed his eyes. All he could see was her face. Not the cold, dead look she had given him last. No, it was the look from their wedding day. The hope. The love.
A sharp, twisting pain lanced through his chest.
He pushed away from the window, his jaw clenching.
She would come back. They always did.