"I want it all, Julian. The firm, the penthouse, the vineyard in Tuscany, and every cent in the Caymans. If you fight me, I’ll make sure the board finds out about the 'irregularities' in your latest acquisition."
I didn’t even look up from the morning paper. The smell of expensive Arabica coffee usually soothed me, but today, it smelled like the sweat of a desperate woman. Across from me sat Vivienne, my wife of twelve years. She was wearing a silk robe that cost more than most people’s cars, her face a mask of practiced indifference. She thought she had me. She thought she had found the one loose thread in my meticulously woven empire.
"The irregularities, Vivienne?" I asked, finally setting the paper down. I looked her dead in the eye. I’m 36, I’ve built Aegis Tech from a garage startup to a multi-billion dollar cybersecurity firm. I don’t flinch at threats. "You mean the ones you helped create while you were ‘working late’ with my Chief Operating Officer, Marcus?"
The color drained from her face for a split second before her defensive shell hardened. She didn’t know I knew. She didn’t know I had spent the last eighteen months watching every encrypted message, every hotel check-in, and every penny she moved into her secret 'escape fund.'
"I don't know what you're talking about," she snapped, her voice trembling slightly. "But Sterling—my lawyer—has the dossier. You sign everything over to me, or I burn your reputation to the ground. You’re a 'self-respecting' man, Julian. Imagine the headlines."
I took a slow sip of my coffee. "You’re right, Vivienne. I am a man who values his reputation. More importantly, I value my peace. If you want the empire, you can have it."
She blinked, stunned. She had come prepared for a bloodbath, a year-long legal war that would drain us both. Instead, I was handing her the keys to the kingdom before the sun was fully up.
"Just like that?" she whispered, suspicion creeping into her blue eyes.
"Just like that," I replied calmly. "I’ll have my lawyer, Elias, draft the uncontested papers by noon. You get Aegis Tech, the real estate portfolio, and the offshore holdings. In exchange, I keep full custody of our daughter, Chloe, and you never speak her name again."
Vivienne let out a sharp, jagged laugh. "You’d give up billions for a ten-year-old? You really are as soft as Marcus said."
"Call me what you like," I stood up, smoothing my suit. "But remember this moment, Vivienne. You asked for this. You demanded every brick of this house. Don't be surprised when the roof starts to leak."
I walked out of the penthouse without looking back. I had a flight to catch, a daughter to pick up from school, and a massive, invisible fuse to light. You see, Vivienne saw an empire. I saw a hollowed-out shell rigged with enough financial dynamite to level a city.
But she wouldn't realize that until the ink was dry, and by then, I’d be a ghost.