His Father’s Will Left Everything To The Ex-Wife He Betrayed-eirian

Emily Rowan did not go to the notary’s office because she wanted closure.

Closure was a word people used when they had not been humiliated in their own home by a man who still knew where the good wineglasses were kept.

She went because a message arrived at 11:47 p.m.

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and turned her quiet apartment cold.

Your presence is required for the reading.

The words sat on her phone screen like a summons.

Not an invitation.

Not a courtesy.

A requirement.

For several minutes, Emily stood barefoot in the narrow hallway of her apartment, the phone glowing in her hand while Monterey Hills slept beyond the windows.

Her architecture studio occupied the first floor of the building.

Her life occupied the second.

That arrangement had been her way of surviving the divorce, one staircase between work and loneliness, one locked door between her past and what she was trying to rebuild.

A year earlier, she had still been Emily Whitlock.

She had still lived in a house with limestone steps, boxed hedges, and a kitchen Adrian said was too modern even though he had approved every fixture.

She had still believed marriage could be restored by patience, good manners, and the refusal to look too closely at late nights.

Then she came home early from a site visit and found Adrian with Lillian Mercer.

Lillian had once been his assistant.

That was how people introduced her afterward, as if the word assistant made what happened smaller.

Emily remembered the smell of Adrian’s cologne in the hallway.

She remembered Lillian’s blouse on the armchair.

She remembered Adrian standing in the doorway of their bedroom with the expression of a man inconvenienced by discovery rather than ashamed of betrayal.

“Emily,” he had said, as if she were the one who needed calming.

That was when something inside her went still.

Not broken.

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