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Too Late, Ex-Husband: Watch Me Shine Novel Cover

Too Late, Ex-Husband: Watch Me Shine

Idella's mother was dying in the ICU, needing a two-million-dollar deposit within forty-eight hours for a lifesaving surgery. Desperate, she begged her billionaire husband, Fount, for an advance on her own trust fund. Instead, he tossed her a hundred-thousand-dollar check for "funeral expenses," fired her from his company, and seized her life's research. He froze all her bank accounts, leaving her unable to even pay the vet bills after their five-year-old surrogate son nearly drowned her dog. When she tried to stop the boy, Fount threatened to have her dying mother thrown onto the street unless she bowed her head and apologized to the child. Stripped of her dignity and money, Idella dragged herself to Fount's private office, only to overhear a conversation through the cracked door. Inside, Fount was intimately holding his adopted sister, Angelita. "But Austin is our flesh and blood, Fount. He can't keep calling that barren loser 'Mom' in public." Idella's universe shattered. She was nothing but a pathetic shield to cover up their incestuous affair, and her severe infertility diagnosis had been a complete lie orchestrated by Fount's doctor. Three years of a sham marriage crushed her soul, but the absolute despair quickly morphed into a freezing knot of hatred. Just as she hit rock bottom, her phone buzzed with a call from Fount's biggest corporate rival, offering her a five-million-dollar signing bonus. Idella took off her diamond wedding ring, ready to burn the Fitzgerald empire to the ground.
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Chapter 1

"Two million dollars, Mrs. Fitzgerald. Within forty-eight hours."

Idella Humphrey stared through the thick glass of the intensive care unit. The heart monitor beside her mother's bed beeped in a slow, agonizing rhythm. Idella's fingernails dug so hard into the cold aluminum windowsill that her knuckles turned a stark, bone-white. Her eyes burned, but the tears refused to fall.

Dr. Evans stood beside her, his expression a practiced mask of professional sympathy. He held out a thick stack of itemized bills.

"The hospital's financial compliance board is strict," Dr. Evans said, his voice lowering. "Without the deposit for the artificial heart valve and the specialized surgical team, we cannot proceed. I'm sorry."

Idella's lungs seized. The air in the corridor suddenly felt too thin to breathe.

"Please," Idella choked out, her throat tight. "Give me a few more days. I can get the money. I just need a little more time."

"I don't make the rules, Idella," Dr. Evans said, stepping back. "Forty-eight hours."

He turned and walked away. The sharp click of his dress shoes against the linoleum floor echoed down the empty corridor, sounding like a metronome counting down the remaining seconds of her mother's life.

Idella's hands shook violently as she pulled her phone from the pocket of her thin trench coat. The screen lit up, displaying fourteen missed calls. All from the hospital's automated billing department and various predatory payday loan agencies she had desperately contacted that morning. The sheer weight of the impending financial ruin pressed down on her chest like an anvil. A wave of nausea hit her stomach. She blocked the numbers without a second thought, her hands clammy with cold sweat.

Taking a deep, ragged breath, she dialed the private line of her husband, Fount Fitzgerald.

The phone rang seven times. Just as she thought it would go to voicemail, a voice answered.

"Office of the CEO. This is Mr. Fitzgerald's assistant." The voice was mechanical, devoid of any warmth.

"I need to speak to Fount," Idella said, her voice cracking. "It's an emergency. My mother is dying. I need an emergency leave of absence and a cash advance on my trust."

"Mr. Fitzgerald is in a board meeting," the assistant interrupted, his tone dripping with impatience. "Furthermore, per the Fitzgerald Group Employee Compliance Manual, your unauthorized departure from the Seattle branch constitutes a severe breach of protocol."

"I am his wife!" Idella practically screamed into the receiver, her chest heaving.

A short, dismissive scoff came through the speaker.

"Have a good day, Ms. Humphrey."

The line went dead.

The dial tone felt like a physical punch to her sternum. She lowered the phone, her hands trembling so hard she almost dropped it. The official channels were useless. Fount was cutting her off.

Idella grabbed her car keys and sprinted out of the hospital doors. The biting chill of the Chicago autumn wind slammed into her, slicing straight through her coat and freezing the sweat on her skin.

She threw herself into the driver's seat of her ten-year-old Toyota. It was the same used car she had bought during her college days. Fount had explicitly forbidden her from parking it in the main estate garage, and without any financial allowance, its maintenance had been neglected for years. She twisted the key. The engine let out a pathetic, wheezing cough.

She tried again. Nothing. A third time. Just a clicking sound.

"No, no, no!" Idella slammed her fist into the steering wheel. The horn let out a short, sharp honk.

She twisted the key one last time, pressing her foot hard on the gas pedal. The engine finally roared to life, shaking the entire chassis.

Idella threw the car into drive. The tires spun on the wet asphalt before catching traction, shooting the car forward toward the Fitzgerald Group headquarters.

Forty minutes later, Idella slammed the brakes, parking illegally in the VIP visitor zone outside the towering glass skyscraper. She shoved the car door open and marched straight toward the revolving doors.

"Ma'am, you can't park there," a security guard barked, stepping into her path. "I need to see a level-one pass."

Idella ignored him, pulling her Seattle branch employee badge from her purse and slapping it against the turnstile scanner.

The machine flashed a harsh, blinding red.

"Your access has been revoked," the guard said, his voice hardening.

Idella pivoted, trying to shove her way through the side VIP gate. Two massive security guards immediately grabbed her arms, their grips like iron vises, halting her in her tracks.

"Let me go! I need to see Fount!" Idella struggled, her boots scraping against the polished marble floor.

"Let her go."

The sharp click of stilettos echoed through the lobby. Susan Gable, the head of Human Resources, walked out of the executive elevator bay. She held a cold, manila envelope in her manicured hand.

Susan waved her hand dismissively. The guards released Idella, who stumbled forward, rubbing her bruised wrists.

Susan slapped the envelope down on the visitor registration desk. She looked at Idella as if she were a piece of trash that had blown in from the street.

"Why is my badge deactivated?" Idella demanded, her chest rising and falling rapidly.

Susan smirked. She pulled a crisp sheet of paper from the envelope.

"Per Mr. Fitzgerald's direct orders," Susan read, her voice carrying across the lobby. "You are in violation of attendance policies. You have two options: sign this immediate resignation, or face a full-scale industry breach-of-contract lawsuit."

Idella stared at the paper. Fount's elegant, looping signature was at the bottom. The air rushed out of her lungs. Three years of grueling research, of building patents for his company, reduced to a threat in a lobby.

She lunged toward the executive elevator buttons.

Susan stepped in front of the panel, blocking her. "Don't embarrass the Fitzgerald family, Idella."

"If I don't see Fount today, I am not leaving this building," Idella gritted her teeth. Employees were beginning to stop and stare, whispers filling the massive space.

Susan leaned in close, her heavy perfume making Idella's stomach churn.

"You are a parasite," Susan whispered, her tone venomous. "A charity case who married up. You have zero leverage to negotiate with the CEO. Sign the paper, or the legal fees will bury you before your mother even flatlines."

The insult burned like acid in Idella's veins. Her pride screamed at her to slap Susan across the face. But the image of her mother's pale face in the ICU flashed in her mind.

She swallowed the bile rising in her throat.

Idella snatched the resignation paper from Susan's hand. She grabbed a black pen from the security desk. Her hand shook violently, but she pressed the tip to the paper and signed her name.

Susan snatched the paper back immediately, a triumphant smile spreading across her lips. She gave Idella one last look of utter disgust and turned on her heel, walking back to the elevators.

Idella stood alone in the center of the opulent lobby. The elevator doors slid shut, sealing away the last shred of illusion she had about her marriage. The corporate route was dead. She had to go to the estate.

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