He Served Me Divorce Papers At Thanksgiving — He Forgot The Villa, The Records, And My Name-QuynhTranJP

The phone lit the inside of Ava’s car a hard electric blue.

6:03 a.m.

Nathan.

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Rain still clung to the windshield in thin silver lines, and the Seattle sky beyond it looked the color of unpolished pewter. The heater pushed out dry warmth that smelled faintly of dust. My stitched palm rested on the folder in my lap. The leather seats creaked when I shifted. Nathan called once, then again, then again, each vibration crawling over the console like an insect that refused to die.

By the eleventh ring, Ava had stopped pretending not to count.

She sat sideways in the driver’s seat, one knee tucked under her, hair twisted into a loose knot that had started falling apart sometime around midnight. The dashboard light sharpened the angles of her face. Attorney first. Friend second. That was how she looked when paper turned dangerous.

He called a twelfth time.

My thumb hovered over the screen. Then I answered.

Nathan didn’t say hello.

Where are you?

His voice came out rough, heavy with too little sleep and too much confidence. Even through the speaker, I could hear the scrape of glass on a countertop and the dull thud of a cabinet door closing. Somewhere behind him, a coffee machine hissed.

I watched a bead of rain slide down the windshield and split into two.

Somewhere you can’t serve dessert, I said.

Ava’s mouth twitched.

Camille, stop this.

No apology. No question about the stitches. No mention of the blood on the tablecloth or the way his mother had watched my hand drip red onto imported linen. Only command. Clean and familiar.

You embarrassed my family last night.

I let the silence sit there until it thinned his breathing.

Then I said, Your family did fine on its own.

He exhaled sharply. I heard a door shut on his end, the acoustics changing, his voice tightening into the private tone he used with investors and interns and anyone he thought could still be managed.

Come home. We’ll handle this quietly.

I looked down at the deed packet in my lap. Monroe Villa. Transfer recorded two years earlier. Notary seal. His signature. My name. In the emergency room, I had stared at that page until the edges blurred. In the car, it looked sharper than the scalpel the nurse had used to cut away the tape from my hand.

I’m not coming home, Nathan.

He waited, as if delay itself could pull me back toward obedience.

Then he lowered his voice another inch.

What exactly did Ava show you?

There it was. Not grief. Not fear of losing me. Inventory.

Enough, I said.

The line went quiet for half a beat. When he spoke again, every soft edge was gone.

Don’t do anything stupid.

I ended the call.

The heater kept blowing. Somewhere down the street, a delivery truck groaned through the wet morning. Ava held out her hand without looking at me. I passed her the phone. She set it face down on the dashboard and said, He knows you found something bigger than the villa.

I watched the gray morning push against the glass. He knows I stopped asking permission.

Ava turned toward me fully then. The folder was open across her knees now, pages fanned like cards in a game Nathan had forgotten he was playing. Account summaries. Transfer slips. gallery reimbursement filings. A chain of signatures so careless it almost looked arrogant.

She tapped a page with one lacquered nail.

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