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The Divorce He Never Saw Coming
The Divorce He Never Saw Coming
Author: Anna Smith

Chapter 1

Author: Anna Smith
I walked into the law office with my divorce papers clutched in my hand. Four years. Four years as Sophia Moretti, wife of James Moretti, heir to the most powerful mafia family in the city.

Today, it ended.

The lawyer didn’t even look up when I walked in.

"I’d like to file for divorce," I said, placing the papers on his desk.

He finally glanced at me—messy ponytail, faded jeans, my backpack still slung over one shoulder. His expression turned stern. "Young lady, divorce isn’t something you file on a whim."

I understood why he didn’t take me seriously. I looked like a college student who had wandered into the wrong office, not someone who had been married for four years.

But I was prepared.

"Just stamp the papers," I said calmly. "I’ll get my husband’s signature."

The Moretti estate was too quiet when I returned. The guards at the gate didn't even blink as I passed—just another invisible fixture in James' world.

I headed straight for James' study. The door was slightly open, and I could hear laughter inside.

Then I smelled it.

Truffles.

James always said he hated strong smells in the house. No garlic, no fish, nothing that lingered. But now, the air was thick with the scent of expensive white truffles, the kind you only get if you are the right person.

I pushed the door open.

There he was. James Moretti, my husband, sitting at his desk, relaxed in a way I'd never seen with me. And beside him was Vicky Rossi, his childhood best friend, back in the city this year after her divorce.

She was feeding him a piece of bread covered in truffles, her fingers lingering just a second too long.

Then James saw me. His smile disappeared.

"Sophia," he said, voice cool. "I didn't expect you back so soon."

Vicky turned, her perfect red lips curling into a smile. "Oh, Sophia! We were just having a snack. There's only enough for two, but I'm sure we can—”

"I'm fine." I cut her off, stepping forward.

I slid the document across the polished mahogany desk, the rustle of paper unnaturally loud in the silent study. James barely glanced up from his whiskey with his glass froze midway to his lips. James' eyes narrowed slightly. "What's this?"

"The university needs a signed safety liability form," I flipped it open to the signature page.

"For my research project," I swallowed. "Since you're my only family now."

The truth sat heavy between us. My parents had been gone for years, killed in a suspicious car accident that first pushed me into James' world. He knew better than anyone how alone I was.

James frowned, "Let me see that—" My nerves suddenly tightened like piano wires. He never asked to read anything. Normally he'd just sign whatever university paperwork I put in front of him without a second glance.

Why today? Why now?

"Oh James," Vicky laughed, placing a hand on his arm. "You're too serious! It's just a form. You remember how many forms we had to sign for the charity gala last month?"

As the heiress to Rossi Enterprises, one of the Moretti family's most important business partners, Vicky had moved effortlessly in James' world since her return. They were always together now, at galas, auctions, and those smoky backroom poker games where deals got made. Everywhere James went these days, Vicky seemed to appear at his elbow, her designer dresses complementing his tailored suits like they were a matched set.

He hesitated, then grabbed his fountain pen and signed with a quick flourish, the same way he signed death warrants and business deals.

I took the papers back before he could see the bold "DIVORCE PETITION" header on the first page.

Vicky smirked, "Honestly, James, you treat her more like a kid sister than a wife."

James didn't deny it. Just took a sip of whiskey.

I turned and walked out before they could see my hands shake.

The door closed behind me.

I was free.

Walking through the marble halls of the Moretti mansion, I clutched the signed divorce papers in my hand. The ink was barely dry, but the marriage had been over long before today.

I remembered how different James used to be. The way his warm hands would trace my spine when he thought I was asleep. The possessive way he'd pull me into shadowed corners at family gatherings, his mouth hot against mine.

Now he barely looked at me.

My parents died when I was sixteen. Don Moretti, the reigning head of the Moretti mafia family at the time, took me in as a favor to my father—his former driver who'd taken a bullet for him. That's how I ended up living under the same roof as James Moretti.

James was everything I shouldn't want. Cold. Dangerous. Ruthless. By twenty-five, he'd already taken over half his father's operations. The newspapers called him a "young entrepreneur." The streets knew better.

I kept my distance at first. Made myself invisible. Until that night four years ago, when James came home covered in someone else's blood.

He found me in the kitchen patching up my own knife wound, a gift from one of his father's men who thought the boss's charity case made easy prey.

James didn't speak. Just took the bandages from my shaking hands and cleaned the cut himself. When his thumb brushed my inner thigh, I should have pushed him away.

Instead, I pulled him closer.

We married three weeks later. A business arrangement, James called it. Protection for me, legitimacy for him. I almost believed him—until Vicky Rossi came back to town and suddenly his late meetings doubled.

Vicky. The Rossi heiress. Their construction empire worked closely with the Moretti family. Since returning after her divorce, And now that her French husband had filed for divorce, she'd become a constant presence——slipping into James' meetings, his cars, his life.

Last month proved it.

I'd waited six hours at Dante's—the restaurant James owned through a shell company—for our anniversary dinner. His right-hand man Michael finally showed up at midnight with a diamond bracelet and an excuse about "business troubles."

The next morning, I saw the photos in the gossip column: James and Vicky at the opera, her fingers tucked in his tuxedo pocket where he usually kept his gun.

That's when I started planning my exit.

The divorce papers were my final exam. James signed them without reading—too distracted by Vicky feeding him stolen glances and stolen kisses.

Now, standing in the mansion's gilded foyer, I traced the notary's embossed seal with my thumb. In a month, this paper would be my ticket to freedom.

No more gilded cages. No more pretending.

James could keep his empire. His violence. His Vicky.

I wanted my life back.
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  • The Divorce He Never Saw Coming   Chapter 11

    James stood transfixed. This was Sophia Moretti, researcher, survivor – passionate, capable, fiercely independent. Not the quiet, accommodating wife he’d relegated to the background of his violent, complicated world. This was the woman whose mind he’d never bothered to engage with, whose ambitions he’d dismissed, whose very essence he’d ignored. He’d never understood her. The realization hit him with the force of the avalanche that had brought him here. He’d married a convenient arrangement, a beautiful shadow. He was only now, as she walked definitively away from him and his world, truly seeing the brilliant, resilient woman he’d let slip through his fingers. The ache of that understanding was profound, a deeper wound than any physical injury.As Sophia disappeared into a large equipment tent, not sparing him a backward glance, the final piece of his old armor shattered. The defenses built on power, control, and emotional detachment crumbled into dust, swept away by the Alpine wind.

  • The Divorce He Never Saw Coming   Chapter 10

    The words James Moretti had rehearsed during the frantic helicopter ride, the desperate digging, the agonizing wait, dissolved like snowflakes on hot skin. Standing before Sophia in the chaotic aftermath of the avalanche, the only thing that emerged was a raw, ragged apology."Sophia," he began, his voice scraped thin by cold and exhaustion. "What you went through... I know. The pregnancy... I know.""Enough!"Sophia cut him off, her voice sharp as glacial ice. A brittle, mocking smile touched her lips. "Did you fly halfway across the world, Mr. Moretti, just to mock how stupid I used to be?" Her words, honed by months of solitary resolve and pain, sliced into him with surgical precision.He flinched, the accusation striking bone. "No! God, no. I... I know how much I hurt you. I was wrong. So wrong." His gaze, bloodshot from thirty hours without sleep, pleaded with her. "Sophia, please. Don't let this divorce be final. Come back."A heavy silence descended, broken only by the distant

  • The Divorce He Never Saw Coming   Chapter 9

    The avalanche had turned the pass into a graveyard of snow and twisted metal. James worked alongside the professionals, his hands blistering inside his gloves as he hacked at the ice. His world narrowed to the rhythm of the axe—lift, strike, dig—each motion a penance.Memories ambushed him between swings: Sophia’s laughter muffled by snowfall during their Vermont trip, the way she’d once traced equations onto his palm to explain her research, her silent tears in the hospital when he’d been with Vicky.A rescuer shouted at him in German, pointing to his bloodied gloves. James ignored him. The pain was nothing compared to the vise around his lungs, the terror that he’d buried her long before this mountain did.Dusk bled into night. James’ vision swam with exhaustion, his fingers numb beneath the bandages a medic had forced onto him. He barely registered the commotion nearby until a voice sliced through his delirium:"Sort casualties by severity—Redirect stage 3 hypothermia to Zone B!"So

  • The Divorce He Never Saw Coming   Chapter 8

    James Moretti's entire body locked up at the student's words."Lost the baby?" The words tasted like broken glass in his mouth.The blue-haired undergrad glared, her grip tightening on her textbooks. "Some bastard got her pregnant and vanished. Didn't even show up when she collapsed." Each syllable landed like a gunshot in the quiet quad.Sophia had been carrying his child.His mind flashed to the hospital - Sophia's pale face in the elevator, the crumpled paper in her fist. And him? Escorting Vicky to her prenatal appointment like a fucking gentleman."Where is she now?" The words scraped his throat raw.The student's lips thinned. "Gone. Left for Switzerland last week."Switzerland.The application forms he'd mocked. The snow he'd claimed she'd hate. Every dismissive comment now a knife twisting in his gut.Midnight found James in his penthouse office, shredding through red tape with a series of violent phone calls. By 3 AM, he had the institute director on a private jet headed to hi

  • The Divorce He Never Saw Coming   Chapter 7

    James Moretti's fingers trembled as they traced the embossed seal on the divorce papers.Vicky's hand landed on his shoulder. "James, it's just some college girl's tantrum. She'll come crawling—" "I have a wife." the words tore from his throat like gunfire. He shoved her away, the movement sending a crystal vase shattering to the floor. Glass shards skittered across marble like the broken pieces of his marriage. The air slapped his face as he burst outside. His Mercedes roared to life, the steering wheel vibrating under his white-knuckled grip. The university gates loomed before him. James stalked past clusters of laughing students, their backpacks heavy with textbooks and futures. He realized with a sickening lurch that he didn't know which room was Sophia's lab. Didn't know her advisor's name. Had never once asked about her research. "Biology lab?" The security guard eyed his rumpled suit with disdain. "All grad students cleared out last week." A beat. "Family would've known

  • The Divorce He Never Saw Coming   Chapter 6

    The Mercedes swerved violently as James barely avoided colliding with a motorcycle. The rider's furious shout pierced through the closed windows, but James didn't even flinch. His knuckles whitened on the steering wheel, the leather creaking under his grip. "James!" Vicky's manicured hand flew to her chest, her diamond bracelet clinking against the dashboard. "What's wrong with you these days? You forgot about our movie plans, and now you're trying to kill us both?" He didn't look at her. "I'm tired. Ask your girlfriends to go with you." The words came out flat, automatic. His mind was elsewhere—specifically, on the last text Sophia had sent him nearly a month ago. A simple "Lab running late, don't wait up." Nothing since. No calls. No messages.Vicky huffed, reapplying her lipstick in the vanity mirror. "You've been like this since Sophia left for her precious lab. Honestly, she's probably just sulking because you've been spending time with me." James' jaw tightened. That didn

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