“Thirty seconds.”
“I just inherited my uncle’s fortune,” he said, his voice trembling with excitement. “Eight hundred million dollars, Vanessa. Pack your things and leave our apartment before I get home.”
At first, I thought it was a joke. Ryan loved exaggeration—big stories, big reactions, big versions of himself. But something in his tone felt different that day. Colder. Detached. Almost… relieved.
“Ryan,” I said, staring at the spreadsheet on my office screen, “what are you talking about?”
“I’m saying I don’t need this marriage anymore.”
The silence that followed felt unreal. The office lights buzzed overhead. Someone nearby laughed at a podcast. Outside the glass walls, people kept moving like nothing in my life had just cracked open.
Then he added, “The separation papers are already done. Just sign them when you get home. Don’t make this messy.”
And he hung up.
I sat there for a full minute, phone still in my hand, before my coworker Denise asked if I was okay. I told her it was a family emergency and left without explaining. On the drive home, I kept expecting him to call back—to say he’d gone too far, that it was a mistake. He never did.
When I walked into the apartment, everything was exactly how he said it would be. The papers were neatly placed on the dining table beside a silver pen. Ryan stood by the kitchen island, dressed in a blazer he wore when he wanted to look important. A bottle of champagne sat chilling nearby.
“You really did it,” I said.
He smiled. “I told you. My uncle Theodore left everything to me. Houses, accounts, investments. I’m done pretending this marriage still works.”
Pretending.
That word hit harder than anything else.
For three years, I had helped keep us afloat—splitting rent, covering bills when his work fell through, even selling my grandmother’s bracelet once to keep us from falling behind. And now he looked at me like I was temporary.
I flipped through the documents. His lawyer had worked fast. Too fast.
“You planned this,” I said quietly.
“I prepared,” he replied. “That’s what smart people do.”
I studied him for a moment, then signed every page without arguing. His smile widened, like I had just proven him right.
I slid the papers back and said, “Enjoy your new fortune, Ryan.”
He leaned back, lifted his champagne glass, and laughed.
Then my phone rang.
The name on the screen made my blood run cold: Theodore Whitmore’s attorney.
Ryan saw the caller ID before I answered.
His posture changed instantly—straightening, lifting his chin, giving me a smug nod as if expecting a celebration.
“Put it on speaker,” he said.
I don’t know why I did. Maybe I was too numb. Maybe some part of me already knew this wasn’t over.
I answered and turned on speaker.
“Ms. Carter?” the voice asked. Calm, formal, older. “This is Gregory Hall, attorney for the estate of Theodore Whitmore. Is this a good time?”
Ryan cut in immediately. “This is Ryan Mercer, his nephew. I assume you’re calling about the transfer.”
There was a pause.
Then the lawyer said, “Actually, I was trying to reach your wife.”
My grip tightened on the phone. Ryan frowned. “That must be a mistake.”
“There’s no mistake,” Mr. Hall replied. “Ms. Carter, your great-uncle Theodore named you as the primary beneficiary six years ago. We’ve been trying to confirm your address.”
For a moment, I thought I had misheard him. “My great-uncle?”
Ryan laughed sharply. “That’s impossible. He was my uncle.”
Paper shuffled on the other end.
“Yes,” Mr. Hall said carefully, “but by blood, he was connected to Ms. Carter’s maternal family. The inheritance was left to Vanessa Carter directly—not her spouse.”
The room fell silent.
Ryan’s expression shifted—from confusion, to irritation, to something close to panic.
“That doesn’t make sense,” he said. “He told me I was the only one who understood him.”
“Personal opinions,” Mr. Hall replied, “are not the same as legal decisions.”
I leaned against the table, my knees suddenly weak. “I haven’t seen him in years,” I said.
“You wrote him once,” Mr. Hall said. “After your wedding. He kept your letter.”
