He Served Divorce Papers At Her Gala, Then Signed Away Everything-hamyt - Chainityai

He Served Divorce Papers At Her Gala, Then Signed Away Everything-hamyt

Richard Dalton believed humiliation was a business tool. If he could do it publicly enough, cleanly enough, and with enough witnesses, the other person would mistake shock for defeat. That was why he chose the charity gala. That was why he chose the microphone. That was why he let the process server cross a ballroom full of donors and reporters with divorce papers in his hand.

Catherine Holloway Dalton had been his wife for twenty years. To the guests, she was quiet money in black velvet, the founder’s daughter who knew which fork to use and which board member’s second wife hated orchids. To Richard, she had become furniture in a mansion he considered his reward. He had stopped seeing the woman and started seeing the asset he no longer wanted.

He had rehearsed the whole evening. The process server would hand her the envelope. Cameras would catch her face. She would go pale, stumble, maybe cry. Then his lawyer Bradford Kanes would guide her into a side room and place the agreement in front of her while the shame was still hot.

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Richard had already told himself it was mercy. Catherine would keep her jewelry. She might keep the Maine cottage if the lien did not swallow it first. She would get a short allowance, then she would learn to live without the name Dalton.

Jessica Reed loved that version of the future. She was twenty-eight, brilliant in the way a knife is brilliant, and she had spent two years telling Richard that Catherine made him look old. At the gala she stood near the stage in red satin, careful to look like an employee and not a woman waiting for another woman’s life.

When the process server said Catherine’s name, the room went silent. Catherine took the envelope. She looked at Richard. She looked at Jessica. Then she walked to the stage.

Richard felt the first irritation of the night. Catherine was supposed to leave. She was supposed to run toward privacy. Instead she took the microphone from him with a polite smile.

“Richard has always loved a captive audience,” she said.

There was no tremor in her voice. That bothered him more than tears would have.

She told him she accepted his terms. She said her lawyer had the countersigned documents ready. Then she told the guests to enjoy dinner and left the ballroom as if she had not just been publicly served by the man who vowed to honor her.

Richard mistook grace for surrender.

In the hotel boardroom, Bradford spread the papers across the table. Jessica sat close to Richard, her knee almost touching his, a little flag planted in conquered land. Emily Price sat beside Catherine. She wore tweed, comfortable shoes, and the expression of a woman who had waited a very long time to be underestimated.

Bradford explained the terms with a softness that made them uglier. Catherine would leave Lake Forest within thirty days. She would waive future claims on Dalton Holloway. She would retain personal jewelry and a cottage that barely mattered. Richard would keep voting control.

Catherine did not read the pages. She watched Richard.

“I want one condition,” she said.

Richard laughed through his nose. “You are not in a position to make demands.”

“Then call it a gift,” Catherine said. “I want out of the Holloway Family Administrative Trust. Completely. Put the governance in your name. The assets, the clauses, the liabilities. I do not want my name attached to it after tonight.”

Richard remembered the trust vaguely. Groundskeeping. Family monuments. Old administrative nonsense from Catherine’s father, Elias Holloway, a paranoid founder who had built the company from two warehouses and a patent portfolio. Richard had always considered the old man sentimental and dead, two conditions that made him easy to ignore.

Bradford skimmed page forty-five. “Standard transfer language,” he said. “No obvious exposure.”

That was the sentence that doomed Richard.

He signed first. He pressed his pen down with theatrical confidence, as if the ink itself knew who owned the room. Catherine signed next, but she did not write Dalton. She wrote Catherine Holloway.

Richard noticed and smiled. He thought it was nostalgia. He thought she was clutching the name because she had lost everything else.

Catherine closed the pen and pushed it away.

“Thank you, Richard,” she said. “You have thirty minutes, Richard.”

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