The Will Arthur Vance Hid Until His Daughter’s Divorce Hearing-hamyt - Chainityai

The Will Arthur Vance Hid Until His Daughter’s Divorce Hearing-hamyt

Richard Sterling arrived at courtroom 4B as if the hearing were only a formality.

He had the confidence of a man who believed every difficult thing had already been arranged by people who worked for him.

The papers were ready.

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The signatures were waiting.

The settlement had been shaped into something that looked legal, sounded reasonable, and left Flora Vance with almost nothing that mattered.

Outside the windows, Chicago carried a hard winter grayness, the kind of cold that made the glass look tired.

Inside, Richard looked warm, clean, and untouched.

His charcoal Italian suit fit him perfectly.

His watch caught the overhead light when he pulled back his sleeve.

His fountain pen tapped against the table at slow intervals, each tap sounding less like impatience and more like a countdown.

Across from him, Flora Vance sat in a beige cardigan with her hair pulled back and her hands locked together.

Her eyes were red, but she had already decided she would not cry in front of him.

Richard had seen enough of her crying during the marriage.

He had learned which silences meant she was afraid, which pauses meant she was hurt, and which lowered looks meant she was trying to survive one more room without making the humiliation worse.

Today, that silence made him smile.

To Richard, it meant she was done fighting.

To Flora, it was the only dignity she had left.

Marcus Blackwood sat beside Richard with the careful posture of a man who knew he had done ugly work in clean language.

He had gone through the prenuptial agreement line by line.

He had reinforced the later amendments.

He had turned Arthur Vance’s company into a negotiable asset and Flora’s grief into a weakness.

Vance Corporation had been Arthur Vance’s life.

He had built it through long workdays, missed vacations, hospital visits postponed for board meetings, and that stubborn belief that a family name was only worth something if the people under it were protected.

By the time Marcus finished shaping the settlement, nearly $400 million of that life’s work was about to slide away from Arthur’s daughter.

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