Nine Minutes After Divorce, He Smiled—Then The Sealed Folder Opened-heuh

Nine minutes after the divorce was finalised, Derek Whitland behaved as though the room had been built for his triumph.

He leaned back in his chair, one ankle resting lightly against the other, his pen tapping a small rhythm against the table.

Outside the office windows, the city looked flat and wet, blurred by a grey afternoon that pressed against the glass.

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Inside, everything was too bright.

The conference room smelt of printer ink, stale coffee, and the expensive kind of silence people use when they are being paid to watch other people’s lives come apart.

Derek smiled at me.

Not kindly.

Not sadly.

He smiled like a man who believed he had finally removed a problem.

“There’s nothing left to divide,” he said.

Beside him, his sister Marla sat with her arms folded, her handbag tucked neatly against her side, her mouth set in the careful line she used whenever she wanted to seem composed rather than cruel.

She had watched the whole morning without once asking whether I was all right.

That was not a surprise.

Derek’s family had stopped asking me human questions long before the marriage officially ended.

To them, I had become a difficulty, an inconvenience, the woman standing between Derek and the cleaner version of his future.

Across the city, they were already gathered at the wellness centre where Kayla Rowan was waiting.

Kayla was younger, elegant, and quiet in the way that made Derek’s relatives soften their voices around her.

They had welcomed her with the warmth they had withdrawn from me piece by piece.

No one had said it plainly, of course.

People like that rarely do.

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