Valerie didn’t even blink at the noise. She was already sitting at her granite kitchen island, holding a cold cup of tea while a thick manila folder rested on the counter beside her.

She had spent the entire night awake, waiting for this exact confrontation to happen. Three years ago, Valerie had walked down the aisle thinking she was building a future with Simon, but she now realized she had simply been subsidizing a lifestyle for a man who mistook her kindness for stupidity.

As a senior partner at a top-tier forensic accounting firm, Valerie spent her professional life unmasking corporate embezzlement and tracking offshore accounts. It was a painful irony that she had failed to audit the blatant fraud happening in her own living room.

The breaking point had arrived only twelve hours earlier. When Valerie returned to the penthouse at 8 p.m., she didn’t find the quiet home she expected after a long day of analyzing spreadsheets.

Instead, she heard the heavy thud of furniture dragging across the hardwood floors of her private workspace. She walked into the room to find two men lifting her custom oak desk while Simon’s mother, Beverly, pointed toward the corner with an air of unearned authority.

“Watch the edges, that piece is high quality,” Beverly instructed the movers. “Simon decided this room should be my guest suite since an office is just a waste of a perfectly good window view.”

Valerie stood in the doorway, her voice icy as she asked, “Does my private studio look like a storage unit to you?”

Simon stepped into the room a moment later, wiping sweat from his forehead and wearing the same arrogant grin that used to make her heart melt. “Don’t start a fight over this, Val. My mom needs a permanent place to stay, and you’re always at the firm anyway, so you don’t really need this much space.”

“Our apartment belongs to me as much as it does to you,” Simon added while crossing his arms. “I live here, so I have the right to make executive decisions about the layout.”

That specific sentence was the final nail in the coffin because Simon knew very well that he hadn’t contributed a single dollar toward the mortgage or the renovations. Valerie realized then that you cannot negotiate with someone who believes they are entitled to the fruit of your labor.

“Fine,” Valerie said with a calmness that clearly caught them off guard.