"Conference Room B, Mrs. Moran," the receptionist said softly.
Atha didn't correct her. Not yet. She just gave a tight, mechanical nod and walked past the desk.
Her black trench coat felt too heavy on her shoulders. The thick, plush carpet of the corridor absorbed the sharp clicks of her heels, making her feel like she was walking underwater.
She stopped outside the heavy oak door of Conference Room B.
Her stomach twisted into a tight, painful knot. She sucked in a sharp breath, the air burning her lungs, and reached up to adjust the collar of her coat.
She pushed the door open.
The harsh, fluorescent light of the room blinded her for a moment. When her vision cleared, the first thing she saw was him.
Haiden Moran sat at the far end of the long mahogany table.
He wore a bespoke charcoal suit that probably cost more than most people made in a year. The fabric stretched taut across his broad shoulders.
He radiated a freezing, untouchable aura that made the air in the room feel ten degrees colder.
Atha's heart slammed against her ribs, skipping a violent beat.
She bit down hard on the inside of her cheek, using the sharp sting of pain to anchor herself. She forced her facial muscles into a mask of absolute indifference.
Mr. Sterling, the senior partner, stood up from his chair. He cleared his throat, the sound loud and awkward in the suffocating silence.
"Please, have a seat, Atha," Sterling said, gesturing to the high-backed leather chair directly across from Haiden.
Atha walked over. She pulled the chair out with slow, deliberate grace and sat down.
Haiden didn't even lift his eyes.
His gaze remained locked on the thick stack of legal documents resting on the polished wood in front of him. His jawline was a sharp, unyielding ridge of tension.
Sterling slid a duplicate stack of papers across the table toward Atha. The crisp white pages hissed against the wood.
"We will now review the asset division terms," Sterling began, his voice a monotonous drone.
He started listing the properties. The penthouse overlooking Central Park. The staggering monthly alimony payments. The stock options.
Atha stared at the numbers printed on the page. The zeroes blurred together.
Her brows pulled together in a tight frown. It didn't feel like a settlement. It felt like charity. It felt like he was throwing money at her to make her disappear faster.
"Why?" Atha's voice cut through the lawyer's droning. It was cold and brittle.
She lifted her eyes and stared directly at Haiden. "Why are you offering this much? It's triple what the prenuptial agreement stated."
Haiden finally looked up.
His eyes were the color of a frozen winter sky. They sliced through her like physical blades.
"It's a buyout of your time," Haiden said. His voice was completely devoid of emotion, a pure, transactional baritone. "Three years of your life. Consider it fair compensation."
The words hit her chest like a physical blow.
Her pride shattered into jagged little pieces. Under the table, her fingers curled into tight fists, her knuckles turning bone-white.
A buyout. She was just a bad investment he was writing off.
She forced the burning sensation at the back of her throat down. The corners of her mouth twitched upward into a mocking, hollow smile.
"Generous," she whispered.
Atha reached out and picked up the heavy Montblanc pen resting beside the documents.
She didn't hesitate. She didn't read the rest of the clauses. She flipped to the last page.
The scratch of the metal nib against the thick paper was deafening in the quiet room. She signed her name on the three designated lines.
Atha Romero. Not Moran.
She capped the pen and shoved the stack of papers back across the table toward Sterling. The movement was sharp and final.
Haiden stared at her freshly inked signatures. A microscopic furrow appeared between his brows, but it vanished as quickly as it came, replaced by his usual impenetrable mask.
He stood up. He reached down and slowly, methodically buttoned his suit jacket.
He lifted his left arm, shooting his cuff to check the Patek Philippe watch on his wrist. The subtle click of the metal band broke the dead silence.
"Out of basic courtesy," Haiden said, his tone dripping with a patronizing edge, "we should have a final dinner tonight. A farewell."
Atha wanted to scream at him. She wanted to throw the heavy pen at his perfect face.
But she refused to let him see how much he was destroying her. She tilted her chin up, her eyes flashing with cold defiance.
"Fine," she said, her voice steady. "Send me the address."
They walked out of the conference room in silence.
They stood side-by-side in front of the elevator banks. The physical distance between them was mere inches, but it felt like a gaping chasm.
The elevator chimed. The doors slid open.
They stepped into the confined space of the metal box. The air grew instantly thick, heavy with the scent of his cedarwood cologne and her own nervous sweat.
The descent to the ground floor felt like an eternity.
The doors opened to the lobby. The soft ding sounded like a final bell.
Haiden's driver was already waiting outside the glass doors, holding a massive black umbrella against the sleet.
Haiden walked straight out into the freezing rain. He ducked under the umbrella and slid into the back of the waiting Maybach.
He never looked back. Not even once.
Atha stood alone under the narrow awning of the law firm.
She watched the sleek black car merge into the chaotic Manhattan traffic until the red taillights disappeared completely.
A crushing, hollow ache opened up in the center of her chest, making it hard to breathe.