The Heiress He Took for Granted
The day I won the eight-million-dollar East Harbor renovation bid, I handed the lead role to Grace Whitman, Ethan Hale’s childhood sweetheart.
Ethan thought I had finally learned to be sensible.
He happily told me he was taking me to the Maldives for our wedding anniversary.
Grace found out that night. She pretended the pressure from work was too much and cried uncontrollably.
Ethan panicked so badly that he canceled a board meeting, stayed with her for three days, then called our anniversary trip an emergency client visit and gave Grace the second ticket.
When he called me, his tone was still calm, almost entitled.
“Sofia, we can talk about emotional stuff later. The company comes first right now. Grace has never handled a project this big on her own. I need to be there with her.”
“You’re my wife. You should understand.”
I sat alone in our empty apartment and looked at the photo Grace had just posted.
In the private airport lounge, Ethan had draped his jacket over her shoulders. Their knees almost touched. Her caption read, [Some people never have to say love. They just show up first, every time.]
I didn’t question him. I didn’t cry.
I only replied, [Okay.]
Ethan probably thought I had finally learned my place. Satisfied, he promised that when he came back, he would give me an even better anniversary.
What he didn’t know was that I had already submitted my resignation to Hale Creative.
And he didn’t know that the document he had signed three days ago wasn’t a project authorization form.
It was our divorce agreement.
By the time he realized what he had lost, I was no longer Mrs. Hale.
I was Sofia Bellandi again.
And Bellandi women do not beg for seats at tables they built.