Mr. Sterling, the senior partner, stood up from his chair. He cleared his throat, his voice sounding particularly abrupt in the silence.
"Please have a seat, Miss Romero."
Romero. Not Moran.
She walked over, pulled out the high-backed leather chair opposite him, and sat down.
Hayden didn't look up. His gaze was fixed on the thick stack of legal documents in front of him. His jawline was taut like a knife.
Sterling slid another stack of documents across the table and pushed it in front of her. The papers hissed as they rubbed against the wood.
"We'll now review the asset division terms," Sterling began, his voice monotonous and somber.
He began to list: a penthouse apartment in Central Park; staggering monthly alimony payments; stock options.
Elsa stared at the numbers on the paper, the zeros blurring into a blur.
She frowned. This didn't feel like a reconciliation. It felt like charity. Like he was throwing money at her so she would disappear faster.
"Why?" Her voice interrupted the lawyer's rambling. Cold and fragile.
She looked up and stared directly at Hayden. "This is three times the amount stipulated in the prenuptial agreement."
Hayden finally raised his head.
His eyes were the color of a winter sky, piercing her like solid blades.
"A buyout of your time," he said. His voice was emotionless, a purely transactional baritone. "Three years. Fair compensation."
A buyout. Her self-esteem shattered into jagged fragments.
Under the table, her fingers were clenched into fists, her knuckles turning white.
When she married him three years ago, she thought everything could be taken slowly.
At twenty-two, Cornelius Moran summoned her to the study on the estate. The old man, in his wheelchair, took her hand and said, "Girl, I need you. Keep an eye on that boy for me." She nodded. Not because of the old man's request, but because she had fallen for Hayden the very first day she saw him. He stood by the study window, backlit, his profile sculpted like a knife's edge. From that moment, she knew she was doomed.
She thought fate had given her a chance. She thought that as long as she tried hard enough, he would see her true feelings.
But she was wrong.
Cornelius said something completely different to Hayden. "Marry her. The Moran family needs a bloodline to continue. The will is already written." The old man used the inheritance as leverage to secure his unruly grandson. Hayden agreed. She didn't know this at the time. She thought he nodded because he was also somewhat tempted. She was so foolish.
Three years into their marriage, she gave it her all. Every morning, she would get up an hour early to grind coffee because he was picky. Before every dinner party, she would memorize the guest list and family relationships to shield him from all awkward questions. When he returned home late from social engagements, she would always leave a light on in the living room. She thought these small acts of kindness would slowly make him feel her warmth.
But he always looked at her with that same gaze. Like he was looking at an object forced into his life. Unmoved. Cold. Unresponsive.
Until Cornelius's burial. At the funeral, he held her hand. She thought it was comfort, finally seeing a crack in the surface. The Monday after the funeral. He filed for divorce. That day, she waited for him at the apartment, prepared dinner, and wore a new dress. He didn't come home. Three days later, the lawyer sent the documents.
She didn't even know why he had to leave so hastily. Later, she overheard from an old classmate that he had mentioned while drinking with others, "She married me for money. Now that the old man is dead, I have no obligation to support her anymore."
It turns out he never believed her from the beginning.
Not even a second.
She forced back the burning sensation deep in her throat. A hollow smile curled at the corners of her lips.
"Generous," she whispered.
She reached out and picked up the heavy Montblanc pen next to the document.
Without hesitation. Without reading the rest of the terms. She turned to the last page.
The scratching sound of the pen gliding across thick paper was deafening in the quiet room. She signed her name on three lines.
Elsa Romero. Not Moran.
She capped her pen and pushed the file back to Sterling. Decisive and resolute.
Hayden stared at the ink she had just signed. A very faint wrinkle appeared between his brows, vanished in an instant, and was replaced by an impenetrable mask.
He stood up and buttoned his suit jacket.
He raised his left arm to examine his Patek Philippe watch. The soft click of the metal strap broke the silence.
"Out of courtesy," he said, his tone condescending. "We should have dinner together tonight. As a farewell."
She wanted to scream. She wanted to smash that pen into his perfect face.
But she refused to let him see how he had destroyed her. She raised her chin, her eyes flashing with cold defiance.
"Okay," she said, her voice steady. "Send me the address."
They silently walked out of the meeting room.
They stood side by side in front of the elevator. The physical distance was only a few inches, yet it felt like a bottomless chasm.
The elevator chimes. The door opens.
They stepped into the cramped, metal-box-like space. The air instantly thickened, filled with the scent of his cedarwood cologne and her nervous sweat.
The descent felt like an eternity.
The lobby door opened. With a "ding," it sounded like the final bell.
The driver was already waiting outside, holding a huge black umbrella to shield himself from the rain and snow.
Hayden stepped into the rain. He slipped under an umbrella and slid into the back seat of the waiting Maybach.
He never looked back.
Elsa stood alone under the narrow awning.
She watched the black sedan merge into the traffic until its red taillights disappeared.
A suffocating, hollow pain spread through her chest, making it hard for her to breathe.
Three years have passed. She hasn't even managed to get him to glance at her. She changed her style of dress, her tone of voice, and her walking speed, all to appear "appropriate" when standing next to him.
But in his eyes, she was nothing more than a symbol from beginning to end. A tool. A transaction.
She gave everything. In return, she received not hatred, but indifference.
Hatred at least shows that he cares.
Indifference is the ultimate form of denial.
The flutter in my heart when I first saw him at twenty-two, and myself at twenty-six sitting in a law firm signing papers. A full three years had passed in between.
She thought she could melt the iceberg.
But there's nothing inside the iceberg. Only ice.