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She Took Nothing

Author: Niccy Ben
last update publish date: 2026-06-17 01:33:24

The papers arrived on a Thursday.

Stellan's lawyer was efficient. The documents were clean, precisely worded, and delivered to Corinna's new office by courier at exactly ten in the morning. No personal note. No phone call. Just a sealed envelope with the Rhys Capital legal team's letterhead pressed into the corner like a stamp of finality.

Corinna's assistant set it on her desk without a word.

She finished the call she was on. Signed off on the Northaven amendment her team had been waiting for. Poured herself a glass of water. Then she sat down, broke the seal, and read through every page with the same focused attention she gave contract proposals.

It was generous. Unreasonably so.

The apartment. A settlement figure that made her jaw want to tighten. A clause releasing her from any claim on Rhys Capital assets — as though she had ever wanted them.

She understood what it was. It was guilt dressed as generosity. A man paying a price he had set himself because it was easier than sitting with what he had actually done.

She picked up her pen.

Crossed out the settlement figure. Wrote zero in clean numerals beside it. Initialled the change.

Crossed out the apartment transfer. Initialled again.

Kept only what was legally required. Her name restored. The marriage dissolved. Nothing more.

She signed the last page, slid everything back into the envelope, and handed it to her assistant on the way out of her office.

"Courier that back today please," she said. "Before noon."

She did not think about it again for the rest of the day.

What she did think about, during the forty minutes between her two afternoon meetings, was the forum.

Nineteen days away. She had accepted the invitation that morning — keynote panel, industry leadership, the city's most influential names gathered in one room. She had accepted it because the Voss Group needed to be visible and because she was done making herself scarce in spaces she had every right to occupy.

The fact that Stellan would be there was not a reason to stay away.

It was simply a fact she had filed and moved past.

She almost believed that.

Her phone buzzed on the desk. She glanced at the screen.

Dorian Ashwell.

She picked it up.

"I heard you were back," he said. No preamble. His voice was the same as she remembered — unhurried, warm, like someone who had never once in his life felt the need to fill silence unnecessarily.

"Word travels," she said.

"Your mother told me."

"Of course she did."

"Are you alright?"

It was a simple question. The kind people asked without expecting a real answer. But Dorian had a way of asking it that made clear he was actually waiting for one.

Corinna leaned back in her chair.

"I will be," she said.

"That's not the same as yes."

"No," she agreed. "It isn't."

A pause. Comfortable. The kind that only existed between people who had known each other long enough not to be afraid of quiet.

"I'm in the city until the end of the month," he said. "The Aldren project. Let me take you to dinner."

"Dorian —"

"Not like that," he said simply. "Just dinner. You've had a difficult week and you shouldn't sit in that office eating whatever your assistant orders for you from the place around the corner."

Corinna almost smiled. "How do you know that's what I do?"

"Because I know you." A beat. "Thursday. The place on Calloway Street. Seven o'clock. You can talk about the Northaven deal the entire time if you want, I don't mind."

She looked out the window at the city below.

"Thursday," she said.

"Good." She could hear the warmth in it without him having to perform it. "I'll see you then."

He hung up first. She held the phone for a moment after.

Dorian Ashwell had been her father's protege, then her friend, then something she had deliberately kept at the edge of her life for three years because it had not been fair to him and she had known it. He deserved more than the fraction of herself she had been able to offer while she was pouring everything into a marriage that was drinking her dry.

She set the phone down.

Stood up and walked to the window.

Somewhere across the city, in the glass tower that housed Rhys Capital, Stellan was probably in a meeting. Or on a call. Or sitting at a desk making decisions with the particular focused efficiency that had always made him magnetic from a distance and exhausting up close. He was probably not thinking about the envelope that would land on his lawyer's desk before noon.

He was probably not thinking about her at all.

She pressed her fingertips lightly against the cool glass and looked at the city for a long moment.

Then her phone buzzed again. Her two o'clock was ready.

She turned from the window, straightened her jacket, and walked back to her desk.

Across the city, Stellan's lawyer called at twelve forty-three.

Stellan was between meetings. He took the call standing at his office window, one hand in his pocket, watching the traffic thirty floors below.

"She returned the documents," his lawyer said.

"Already?"

"This morning. There's something you should know. She crossed out the settlement."

Stellan said nothing.

"The apartment transfer as well. She took nothing, Stellan. Initialled every change herself. Kept only the dissolution."

The line was quiet for a moment.

"She didn't want anything," his lawyer said — and there was something in his tone that had no business being in a legal update. Something that sat uncomfortably close to judgement.

"I heard you," Stellan said.

He ended the call.

He stood at the window for longer than he intended to.

She had crossed out the settlement.

He had written that figure carefully. Had told himself it was the right thing to do — that it was fair, that it accounted for three years, that it was what a decent man offered. He had written it and felt, for a brief moment, that it balanced something.

She had crossed it out without a conversation. Without a counteroffer. Without a single word.

She had taken nothing.

Stellan stared at the city below and felt, for the first time since Tuesday morning, something he did not have a clean name for settle into the centre of his chest and refuse to move.

His two o'clock was waiting.

He did not go in for another four minutes.

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