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Divorcing The CEO: Escaping His Cruel Cage

Divorcing The CEO: Escaping His Cruel Cage

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I returned to New York after a three-year exile, just to attend my father's funeral. But my estranged husband, Julian, ambushed me at the airport with divorce papers. He told me that if I didn't sign them immediately, my father wouldn't get a burial plot. And standing right by his side was Janet, my former best friend. At the funeral, they played the perfect, grieving couple, completely humiliating me. When I finally snapped and told them to leave, Janet faked a dramatic collapse. Julian looked at me with absolute disgust, accusing me of being a jealous monster who was hurting his pregnant girlfriend. He had secretly absorbed all my family's assets, leaving me penniless and freezing on the streets, tossing a charity check at me like I was a beggar. I couldn't understand why my years of desperate devotion were treated like a toxic curse. Why did the quiet friend I grew up protecting scheme to steal my husband, my fortune, and my dignity? Refusing his humiliating money, I swallowed my pride and took a job as a maid at a luxury hotel just to survive. But fate wouldn't even give me that peace. While pushing a room service cart down the hallway, I ran straight into Julian. He stared at my crisp white apron, his eyes turning cold. "For the duration of my stay, all services for the presidential suite will be handled by her alone." He was going to make me serve him and Janet, determined to crush the very last shred of my pride.

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Divorcing The CEO: Escaping His Cruel Cage Chapter 1

Chloe Hayes dragged her suitcase through the arrivals gate at JFK, and the humid New York air hit her like a physical blow. It felt heavy, thick with memories she had spent three years trying to forget.

Chloe was able to come back this time because her father had passed away.

She scanned the crowd for a taxi, a way to escape into the city's anonymity, but two men in sharp, black suits stepped directly into her path. They moved with a quiet efficiency that was more intimidating than any overt threat.

The man in the lead was Keith Foster, Julian Sinclair's executive assistant. Chloe's stomach tightened. She recognized the polite, impenetrable mask he wore.

"Mrs. Sinclair," Keith said, his voice perfectly level, devoid of any sympathy. "Mr. Sinclair is waiting for you in the car."

Chloe's gaze flickered past them to the curb, where a black Bentley sat idling, its tinted windows like obsidian mirrors. A bitter laugh escaped her lips, sharp and brittle. "My name is Hayes. It's not your Mrs. Sinclair. And I have nothing to say to him. Don't you know that a good dog doesn't get in the way?"

She tried to step around them, but the second man, broader and silent, shifted his weight, effortlessly cutting off her path. They had her boxed in.

"Mrs. Sinclair," Keith's voice dropped, a subtle warning threading through the courtesy. "You know Mr. Sinclair's temperament. Please don't make this difficult for me. An airport has many eyes, but it also has many blind spots. If a scene is made, you will be the one who suffers."

The threat was clear. She was powerless here, just as she had been three years ago. The fight drained out of her, replaced by a weary resignation. Her shoulders slumped, and she allowed them to guide her toward the Bentley.

The rear door opened, and a wave of cold, conditioned air washed over her. The interior was dark, smelling of expensive leather and something else-the clean, sharp scent of Julian's cologne. He was sitting on the far side, a silhouette against the city lights. His jaw was tight, his profile as severe as if carved from granite. He didn't even look at her as she slid onto the seat.

The door clicked shut, sealing them in an suffocating silence.

"I told you to inform me of your any itinerary arrangements," he said finally, his voice devoid of any warmth. It was the voice he used for underperforming subordinates. "I would have arranged for your security from the moment you landed. It's for your own good."

Chloe let out another cold laugh. "Your good, you mean. Afraid I'd go straight to the press and expose your sordid little affair?"

A muscle twitched in his jaw, the only sign of irritation. He reached into the seat pocket in front of him and pulled out a manila envelope, tossing it onto the seat between them. The gesture was dismissive, insulting.

"I've handled your father's arrangements. You don't need to worry about the funeral tomorrow," he stated, his eyes fixed on the window. "All you need to do is sign the divorce agreement."

Chloe stared at the envelope as if it were a snake. So that was it. That was the reason for this airport ambush. Her father had just passed away, his body not yet cold, and he was already pushing for a divorce, eager to clear the way for his mistress. The terms inside, she knew, would be generous. An insultingly large sum to buy her silence and her name.

She remembered the look of disgust in his eyes on their wedding day, a ceremony her father had forced upon him. But now she suspected the truth: her father had never forced him. Julian had wanted the marriage to get close to the Hayes fortune. It was the same coldness she felt from him now.

As if on cue, his phone lit up on the center console. The name on the screen was 'Janet'. He picked it up, and his entire demeanor shifted. The harsh lines of his face softened, and his voice, when he spoke, was a low, gentle murmur that made Chloe's blood run cold.

"I'll be back soon."

A woman's soft, cloying voice trickled from the speaker, audible in the small space. Chloe's nails dug into her palms, the sharp pain a welcome distraction from the fist squeezing her heart. Janet Bell. Her once-best friend. The woman who had taken everything.

She remembered all the times she'd found them together, the stolen glances, the shared smiles. It was because of Janet that Julian had banished her to Europe, branded her with a crime she didn't commit. And now, on the eve of her father's funeral, they were doing this. If she had known this would be the outcome, she would have pressed her foot down on the accelerator that night. She would have made sure Janet never walked again.

Janet's voice, oozing fake concern, filled the car. "Darling, have you picked up Chloe? You two should come back soon. I've made all her favorite dishes. She must have missed home-cooked food all these years in Europe."

"No," Julian replied curtly. "We're going to sign the papers first."

"Oh," Janet's voice was a perfect imitation of disappointment. "Well, can I speak to her for a moment? I'm so worried about her."

Julian held the phone out to Chloe. "She's worried about you."

Chloe took the phone, her hand trembling with rage. She brought it to her ear. "Janet," she said, her voice dangerously sweet. "As long as I don't sign these papers, you will always be the mistress who can't be seen in the light of day. And a mistress should know her place. Don't flaunt yourself in front of the wife, or next time, it won't be as simple as a car accident. I haven't forgotten a single thing you did to me these past three years."

Julian snatched the phone back and ended the call, his eyes finally, truly, looking at her. They were blazing with a cold fury.

"Chloe," he said, his voice a low, menacing growl. "If you want your father to have a decent burial, you will sign it. All of Hayes Corporation's assets, including that cemetery plot, are now under my name."

The words hit her like a physical blow. Her face went white. He was using her father's final resting place to threaten her. This was the man she had once loved, a man so ruthless he would hold a dead man hostage.

"Is that all you have?" she whispered, her voice cracking. "Using a dead man to control me? My father is gone, have you forgotten everything he did for you? But I'm not the same naive girl you can crush anymore."

Julian's face was a mask of thunder. Before he could retort, Chloe reached for the door handle. "Stop the car. I'm getting out. I feel sick being in here with you."

The car pulled over. The divorce papers lay unsigned between them. She stepped out into the damp city air and watched the Bentley speed away, disappearing into the river of traffic. She stood alone on the sidewalk, surrounded by the towering, indifferent skyscrapers her father had helped build. A young couple walked past, holding hands, their laughter a sharp, painful sound.

Tears finally broke free, hot and silent, streaming down her face. Three years ago, her father had been a king in this city. Every brick and tile in this bustling city is the result of his father's efforts.Then she was sent away, and soon after, he was imprisoned for embezzlement, dying alone in a cell. All of it, every last bit of her family's ruin, was because of the pair of adulterers.

But she wasn't broken. She had been forged anew in the fires of betrayal. And she was back to make them pay.

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