Chapter 1
I built my wife’s family business from the ground up, sacrificing everything so that her world could thrive.
The night I collapsed from stomach bleeding after too many business drinks, she was out laughing with her childhood sweetheart. She even had the nerve to call me dull and uptight.
I smiled when I finally handed her the divorce papers.
“I wish you both a happy life together.”
But instead of signing it, she tore it to pieces, tears in her eyes.
“I’m not letting you go,” she said.
I leaned back against the sofa, a small suitcase resting beside me.
On the table in front of me lay the divorce papers.
From the doorway came the sound of movement—Angela Band and her mother, Greta Mormont, had finally returned.
When they saw me, both looked slightly surprised.
“Why are you home so early today?”
Angela asked casually before heading straight into the bedroom, while Greta went into the kitchen.
“You just sit there doing nothing the moment you come home? You can’t even think of making dinner?” she said, holding a pot lid in one hand and a small piece of cake in the other.
“Get something prepared now. I’ve been shopping all day and I’m exhausted. After dinner, I want to take a long bath and rest.”
But this time, I didn’t move. I didn’t obey like I always did.
“Angela, come out,” I called out. “I need to talk to you.”
“What is it? Can’t it wait until after dinner? I want to try on my new clothes first.”
“It’s important.”
She came out reluctantly. “What is it?”
I pushed the divorce papers across the table toward her.
“Let’s get a divorce.”
“Is this because of Ben? I already told you, there’s nothing between us—it was just harmless fun!”
I closed my eyes. “I’m tired, Angela. Please, just let me go.”
Ben Fowler had been Angela’s childhood sweetheart, and even after our marriage, Greta never stopped trying to bring them together.
“Fine,” Greta said sharply.
“Get the divorce done quickly. Once it’s over, Angela can finally marry Ben.”
I took out my wallet and began removing the cards one by one.
“This one’s for the company’s profit dividends. This is for the utilities. These are your brand membership cards. And these—business contact cards for our partner companies.”
Finally, I slipped off my wedding ring and placed it on top of the divorce papers.
“And this.”
She picked up the papers, and the ring slipped from her grasp, rolling across the floor until it disappeared somewhere out of sight.
Then she tore the divorce papers, her teeth clenched as she hissed through trembling lips, “You. Wish!”
I picked up my suitcase and walked toward the door.
“I wish you and Ben a lifetime of happiness,” I said.
Angela shrieked, her voice sharp. “Stop right there! If you’re really leaving, those clothes you’re wearing are mine too. Leave them behind!”
I gave a small laugh.
“All right.”
One by one, I took off my clothes and placed them beside the suitcase.
“Now, may I go?”
With only my phone and the single bank card left in my wallet, I stepped out—wearing nothing but my underwear—leaving behind the home I had lived in for ten years.
---
Outside, the wind howled and snow lashed against my skin, the cold biting to the bone.
And yet, I had never felt so free.
People on the street turned their heads to stare.
Then, a thick cotton coat fell over my shoulders.
“They wouldn’t even let you keep your clothes?” Darren Thunberg asked.
My teeth chattered as I shivered from the cold, but after sitting in the car for a while, warmth slowly returned to my body.
Just then, Darren's phone rang.
The moment he answered, Angela’s voice burst through the speaker.
“Darren, is Callum with you?”
He glanced at me through the rearview mirror. “He is.”
“Hand him the phone.”
Darren passed the phone to me.
“Listen to me, Callum,” she said hurriedly. “This is all just a misunderstanding.”
I let out a quiet laugh. “And the child? Was that also a misunderstanding?”
She fell silent. No words came through the line.
After I hung up, Darren looked at me, worry shadowing his face.
“You’re really not going to tell her?”
I shook my head. “No. I’m tired, Darren. I’ve had enough of this life.”
He nodded. “All right. If that’s your decision, I’ll respect it.”
All I had left was a few years’ worth of salary saved in my account.
After ten years working for Band Corporation, I had nothing else to show for it.
When I arrived at the hotel and went to pay for a room, the receptionist looked at me apologetically and said, “Your card has been declined, Sir.”
Chapter 2
When Darren heard the news, he immediately rolled up his sleeves and charged toward the door.
I hurried to grab his arm.
“What are you doing?”
“I’m going to ask those bastards what you ever did to deserve this!”
“In their eyes,” I said quietly, “the fact that they offered to let me stay and I still chose to leave—that alone makes me the one in the wrong. So why bother asking?”
I had expected Angela to refuse the divorce, or that she would at least make me leave everything I’d earned at the company behind.
But I hadn’t expected her to freeze even my own salary.
Darren cursed under his breath, then tugged at my sleeve.
“Come on. You’re coming to my place. I don’t believe you can’t survive without her family's company to support you.”
I stopped walking. “I can’t drag you into this.”
“I’m not afraid of being dragged down! You’re coming with me.”
Seeing the look in his eyes, I didn’t argue further.
But just as I feared, the next morning someone banged on the door.
Two public officers stood outside, badges in hand.
“Mr. Smith, you have been accused of embezzlement. Please come with us to assist in the investigation.”
---
Darren’s eyes reddened as he looked at me.
“Just you wait. I’ll go find those bastards and make them pay!”
He was already storming toward the door when I stopped him.
“It’s fine. You know I didn’t do anything. Just get me a coat—it looks like it’s snowing again.”
He rushed to grab a thick jacket.
I put it on and smiled at him. “I can handle this. Don’t do anything reckless.”
“Fine, but come back soon. My mom told me to bring you home this year for a handsome meal.”
“All right.”
I followed the officers out.
Just as I reached the door, Darren shouted after me, “Callum!”
I turned around. He forced a small smile.
“Remember, we're bros. No matter what happens, you can always count on me.”
“I know.”
I managed a faint smile before turning away—then couldn’t hold it any longer.
The ache in my chest swelled until it almost spilled over.
Darren had been my college classmate, a local. Ever since he learned I was alone, he’d brought me home every holiday.
He always said, “My mom likes you more than she likes me. She insists you come over every year.”
Of course, I knew why. He just couldn’t stand seeing me spend those nights by myself.
He looked rough on the outside, but no one had a kinder heart.
But his family had treated me too well—I couldn’t drag them into this mess.
When I arrived at the detention center, Angela was already there.
“Did you really think you could escape my grasp?” she sneered. “It only took a single day before you came crawling back to me.”
“Angela, you already have Ben. Why won’t you let me go?”
“As long as you never mention divorce again,” she said coldly, “I can have you released today.”
“Don’t make me hate you…” I trailed off quietly.
Even when I discovered her betrayal, I hadn’t hated her. I had waited, hoping she might change.
But now, her obsession terrified me.
“I won’t let you go. Not unless I die,” said with a chilling calm.
It was the first time her expression truly frightened me.
A few days later, another visitor came—Greta.
When she saw the state I was in, she gave a cold, mocking laugh.
“So, you finally learned your place. Angela and Ben will be getting married soon. But before that, we need to settle what you owe my family.”
I almost laughed.
Ten years of servitude, and I still ended up with nothing.
And now, somehow, I owed them.
My life these past ten years felt like a cruel joke.
“Well then,” I said quietly, “why don’t you tell me—what exactly do I owe you?”
Chapter 3
It seemed I had touched a nerve.
“You still have the nerve to ask!” she snapped.
“If it weren’t for you, the Band Corporation would have gone public years ago! You held us back, and now look at us—stuck in this mediocre state!”
“That’s something your nephew told you, isn’t it?” I said calmly.
Her nephew, Hank Mormont, had returned from studying abroad five years ago.
With her connections, Greta secured him a position at Band Corporation.
From the moment he joined, he accused the company of being outdated and called me—its manager—a coward who hindered progress.
He pushed for aggressive financing, expansion, and a fast track to listing the company. But what he never understood was that back then, I was already struggling to keep Band Corporation afloat.
After graduating, I started at Band Corporation as a junior employee and worked my way up to management step by step.
It was during that time that Angela’s father noticed me and arranged for us to be together.
At first, I didn’t want to marry a pampered heiress, but she was lively, open-hearted, full of the sunshine I had always longed for.
Someone like her was irresistibly magnetic to me.
Before I knew it, I had fallen for her.
When we got together, control of the company was handed over to me.
In the beginning, Band Corporation was just a small trading company.
After I took over, I not only brought in new clients but also expanded the supply lines for multiple products. I even built a factory of our own, finally securing a stable source of goods.
But because we started small, both the Band and Mormont families had relatives scattered throughout the company.
The staff network was tangled and complicated, and new hires found it nearly impossible to fit in.
It took me two years to untangle those relationships and assign everyone to roles where they could actually contribute.
That was how we slowly built the company into what it had become.
Then Hank returned and began feeding his aunt nonsense, claiming I lacked vision and courage, saying Band Corporation needed a bold leader willing to take risks.
I couldn’t bear to see all my hard work destroyed, nor could I let down the employees who had trusted me.
So, I suppressed him—and that suppression lasted five years.
For all those years, he stayed as vice director of the sales department. Yet in that time, he failed to bring in new clients and even managed to offend several of the ones I had nurtured.
“If you had just let Hank switch departments, he would have achieved something by now!” Greta scolded me.
I smiled faintly. “Now that I’m gone, nothing stands in his way. He can finally shine.”
“You don’t need to remind me! Hank graduated from a prestigious business school abroad—how could he possibly be worse than you?”
“So, Greta, what brings you here today?” I asked.
Caught off guard, she stammered, and I instantly knew what she was after.
Sure enough, she said, “Where’s that new product proposal you submitted last month?”
I leaned back in my chair. “Didn’t you say the new product was too risky?”
Three months ago, I had noticed a new type of product emerging on the market—one that fit perfectly with the modern lifestyle of young consumers.
I drafted a proposal for it, but Hank and his henchman dismissed it as reckless.
Yet within just a month, that very product flooded the market, and many companies had already begun producing it.
“Well? Are you going to give it to me or not?” she demanded.
“I can’t,” I replied. “I’ve destroyed it.”
In truth, I had kept it until just last week, when I finally fed the entire proposal through the shredder.
I had spent nearly half a month researching the market, analyzing costs, and forecasting industry trends to complete that plan.
It could have taken Band Corporation to a new level—but none of that mattered anymore.
“Fine!” she snapped.
“If that’s how you want to play it, let’s see if you can make it on your own!”