He Bought His Mistress A Penthouse After Divorce, Then His Card Died-eirian

The courthouse smelled like old polish, raincoats, and decisions nobody could take back.

Meredith Vance sat with her hands folded on the mahogany table while her husband checked his watch for the third time.

Preston Clay had dressed for the divorce like he was being photographed for a business magazine.

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His suit was charcoal, his cuff links were silver, and his face carried the relaxed impatience of a man who believed the worst part of his day would be traffic.

Beside him sat his mother, Lorraine, wrapped in pearls and satisfaction.

She had placed a settlement check on the table as carefully as a queen feeding a servant from a balcony.

“Five million,” Lorraine said, tapping the edge of it with one manicured nail.

“More than a girl from your background should ever expect.”

Preston did not look embarrassed.

He looked relieved.

“Sign it, Meredith,” he said.

“Tiffany is waiting, and she gets tired now.”

Meredith knew why he said that last part.

Tiffany Starr, twenty-four years old and glowing in the courthouse lobby, had been touching her flat stomach all morning while Lorraine used the word heir like it was a prayer.

For ten years, Meredith had been made to feel like a broken appliance because she could not give the Clay family a child.

Now Preston wanted her to sit quietly while he replaced her, erased her, and paid her like a dismissed employee.

He shoved the divorce papers across the table.

“Take your severance, housekeeper.”

Something in Meredith went very still.

Not cold.

Not numb.

Still.

She picked up the pen and signed her maiden name, Meredith Vance, with a hand that did not shake.

Then she stood, left the check behind, and looked at Lorraine.

“Keep it,” she said.

“You are going to need it.”

Preston laughed as if she had made a charming threat in a language he did not speak.

Meredith walked out past the reporters Lorraine had invited, past Tiffany’s little pity wave, and into the back of a sedan hired under a name Preston had never bothered to learn.

Only after the door closed did she take out the phone from the hidden pocket of her purse.

The number was saved under Felix.

He answered on the second ring.

“Ms. Vance.”

“The divorce is final,” she said.

“Execute Section 19.”

Five years earlier, Arthur Clay had built the trap from a hospital bed.

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