Billionaire Attempted to Divorce His “Poor” Wife for His Mistress – Until Her Royal Title Left Everyone Stunned…
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She picked up her phone. She didn’t call a lawyer; she dialed an international number.
“Hello,” a crisp, accented voice answered on the second ring. “Royal Household Chief of Staff speaking”.
“Arthur,” Emily said, her voice shifting from the broken housewife to something far colder. “It’s me. Prepare the jet and tell grandfather I’m finally accepting the invitation to the Vanguard Gala”.
Friday came with a vengeance. Emily hadn’t fought him; she had packed her meager belongings into three cardboard boxes. When Liam returned to the apartment that afternoon, he wasn’t alone; Jessica Vance was with him.
Jessica was stunning in a terrifying way. She wore a red dress that screamed money and heels that clicked aggressively on the hardwood floors. She looked at Emily like one might look at a stain on a rug.
“Oh, you’re still here?” Jessica said, wrinkling her nose. “Liam, babe, I thought you said the help would be gone by noon”.
Liam chuckled, wrapping an arm around Jessica’s waist. “She’s just slow, Jess, you know how she is”.
Emily taped up the last box. She stood up and faced them. “I’m leaving, Liam, but I want you to remember something”.
“Save the speech,” Liam rolled his eyes. “Go find a small apartment in Queens. Live your small life”.
Jessica walked over to the kitchen counter, picking up a ceramic mug Emily had hand-painted years ago. “Ugh, this is tacky,” she dropped it; it shattered on the floor.
“Oops. Well, we’re renovating anyway. I need everything marble”.
Emily looked at the shards of pottery. She didn’t scream; she didn’t cry. She just looked at Liam.
“You think you know who I am,” Emily said softly. “But you never asked. In seven years, you never asked about my family in Europe. You just assumed I was poor because I didn’t spend money”.
“Because you have no money,” Liam shouted, losing his patience. “Your parents are farmers! You told me that!”.
“I told you they worked the land,” Emily corrected. “I never said they were farmers. Get out,” Liam pointed to the door.
“And don’t come near the Vanguard Gala next week. It’s a black tie event for the elite. Security has your picture. If you try to crash it to beg for alimony, they’ll throw you in the street”.
Emily picked up her box. “Enjoy the apartment, Liam. I hope it’s worth it”. She walked out into the hallway.
As the elevator doors closed, she heard Jessica laughing. “She’s pathetic, Liam. God, how did you survive seven years with that mouse? It’s over now, babe”.
Liam’s voice faded. “Now let’s talk about the merger. Your dad is coming to the gala, right?”.
Emily stepped out of the building. It was raining, but instead of walking to her old Honda, a sleek black sedan with tinted windows pulled up to the curb. A man in a dark suit stepped out, holding an umbrella. He wasn’t a taxi driver; he was security.
“Your Highness,” the man said, bowing his head slightly as he opened the door.
“No titles yet, Thomas,” Emily said, sliding into the leather interior. “Not until the gala”.
“We have booked the penthouse suite at the Plaza under the alias, as requested,” Thomas said, closing the door. “And the dress has arrived from Paris”.
Emily looked out the window as the car pulled away, watching the apartment building disappear in the rain. Liam thought he had discarded a piece of trash. He had no idea he had just declared war on the sole heir to the Duchy of Valoria.
Back in the apartment, Liam was pouring champagne. His phone buzzed; it was a text from his boss, the CEO of Vanguard Global, Mr. Sterling. The text mentioned: “The royal delegation from Europe is attending. We need to impress them to secure the Euro trade deal. I’m counting on you and your new fiancé to charm them. Don’t mess this up”.
“Too easy,” Liam smirked, showing the text to Jessica. “We’re going to run this city”. Little did he know, the royal delegation wasn’t coming to sign a deal; they were coming to collect their princess.
The week leading up to the Vanguard Gala was a blur of excess for Liam. With Emily gone, he felt a weight lift off his shoulders, a weight he hadn’t realized was actually his own conscience dying. He moved Jessica into the apartment immediately. Within 48 hours, she had hired a team of contractors to rip out the dull oak cabinets Emily had restored by hand.
On Wednesday morning, Liam sat in his corner office overlooking Central Park. He was reviewing the dossier for the royal delegation. “The Duchy of Valoria isn’t just a tourist trap in Europe. They control the sovereign wealth fund that holds 40% of the rare earth mineral rights we need for the tech merger,” Robert Sterling, the CEO, told him.
Robert explained the Grand Duke had sent a proxy with absolute authority. “They value tradition, loyalty, and class. That’s why I picked you, Liam. You’ve got that family man image”.
Liam stiffened slightly. “Actually, Robert, about that… Emily and I were separated. I’ll be bringing Jessica Vance”.
Robert frowned. “Vance, the oiler. That’s a bit flashy, isn’t it? The Valorans are old money, quiet money”.
“Jessica is perfect,” Liam insisted. “She speaks the language of wealth. Emily was… well, she would have worn a polyester dress and embarrassed the firm. Jessica was born for this”.
While Liam was busy trying to curate the perfect image of success, the reality of power was unfolding in the presidential suite at the Plaza Hotel. Emily sat on a velvet sofa, reading a legal document on an iPad.
“The assets have been frozen, Your Highness,” Arthur, the royal chief of staff, said quietly. “We’ve acquired the majority voting rights in Vanguard Global through Shell Companies this morning. As of 9:00 a.m., you are technically Mr. Sterling’s boss’s boss”.
“Does Liam know?”.
“No one knows,” Arthur said. “Wall Street thinks it’s a blind trust from Singapore. They won’t know until you introduce yourself at the gala”.
Emily had hidden her identity for seven years because she wanted to be loved for herself, not her title. She had her answer.
“He called me small,” Emily said softly. “He said I had no ambition”.
Arthur opened a heavy velvet box on the table. Inside lay the Valoran Star, a diamond and sapphire necklace that hadn’t been seen in public since Emily’s grandmother wore it to her coronation in 1968. It was worth more than the entire building Liam lived in.
“If you are going to end a marriage, you should do it wearing the family colors,” Arthur relayed.
Emily touched the cold gems. “Liam wanted a woman who could command a room,” she whispered. “I’m going to give him exactly what he asked for”.
Saturday night arrived with the flash of paparazzi bulbs. Liam stepped out of a rented Rolls-Royce, extending her hand to Jessica. She emerged wearing a bright gold sequined dress that lacked subtlety; she looked like a trophy.
Robert Sterling, the CEO, rushed over to them. “Liam, you’re late,” Robert hissed.
Robert anxiously explained that the protocol had changed. “We are not approaching them; we wait for them to approach us. Do not speak unless spoken to, and for God’s sake, keep Jessica quiet”.
“Excuse me,” Jessica bristled. “My father owns half of Texas, and these people own half of Europe’s debt”.
