Cherreads

The Divorce Lawyer Who Married The Enforcer

jakedesmondblake
28
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 28 chs / week.
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NOT RATINGS
596
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Synopsis
"Sign the contract, counselor. Or I burn everything you built." Zara Cole has one rule: marriages end. She has spent six years in the most brutal divorce courts in New York City tearing apart the unions of the corrupt, the powerful, and the cruel. She does not believe in love. She does not believe in loyalty. She believes in evidence, leverage, and exit clauses. Then Don Moreno calls in a debt she never knew she owed. Two rival crime families are at war. The Ricci family and the Moreno family have been bleeding each other dry for three years while a third enemy, the Calabrese syndicate, waits to swallow them both. The only way to stop the war is a merger. And a merger, in the world of organized crime, is sealed with a marriage. The Morenos choose Zara. Not because she is innocent. Because she is already theirs. Her new husband is Dante Ricci. Thirty-four years old. The most feared enforcer in the city. A man who has never once raised his voice because he has never needed to. He does not believe in love. He believes in results. And right now, the result required is a wife. What Zara does not expect is that someone will try to kill her three days into the marriage. What she does not expect is that Dante will become something terrifying when he is angry on her behalf. What she does not expect is that the man who does not believe in love will stand between her and a bullet without flinching. And what Dante does not expect is a woman who fights him in every room, outthinks him at every turn, and refuses to be afraid of him. A woman who uses the marriage contract itself as a weapon. A woman who is quietly, carefully, and completely destroying him. She built her career on endings. He has never let anything end without his permission. Together they are either the city's greatest power couple or its most catastrophic war. One of them will have to change their mind about love. The other will have to change their mind about control. The real question is which one breaks first.
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Chapter 1 - THE COURTROOM QUEEN

Zara Pov

"The Cyprus accounts are structured as shell entities registered to subsidiaries that do not exist."

Zara Cole speaks to the courtroom like she is reading tax code aloud. Her voice is flat. Bored even. Gregory Marchetti's lead counsel shifts in his seat.

"However," she continues, opening the folder in her left hand, "they do exist in the financial records your client submitted during discovery. This is interesting because nonexistent entities cannot have transaction histories. Yet here we have eighteen months of documented transfers."

She holds up the page. The judge leans forward.

Gregory Marchetti's face goes white.

Zara has been doing this for six years. She knows exactly what a man looks like the moment he understands he is about to lose everything. It always happens in the shoulders first. The small collapse inward. Then the jaw. Then the careful blankness he pulls over his face when he realizes the room has already decided his fate.

She does not feel mercy for him. She feels clarity.

"Your Honor, I would like to present the documentation showing transfers made three weeks after your client submitted amended financial statements claiming these same accounts were liquidated."

The judge's expression does not change. It does not have to.

Zara watches the mathematics happen in real time. Three shell companies. Twelve million dollars. One prenuptial agreement with a forged signature date that she found by comparing the ink age to the paper weight because she has a photographic memory and because she spent seventeen hours on Sunday with a forensic document examiner who confirmed what she already knew.

Gregory's three lawyers start whispering. Elena Marchetti, sitting two chairs from her husband, does something Zara has learned to recognize in her clients. She stops holding her breath.

By minute twelve of her presentation, Gregory's lead counsel is requesting a recess. By minute twenty, his legal team is running the numbers on settlement instead of defense. By minute forty, Elena Marchetti is signing papers that give her the penthouse in Manhattan, the beach house in Southampton, and sole custody of their two children.

Zara does not smile. She clicks her briefcase shut. The sound echoes slightly in the courtroom because the room has gone quiet in that specific way rooms get when power has just redistributed itself and everyone can feel it.

She walks out without looking back. This is important. Looking back suggests attachment. Zara Cole does not attach.

In the elevator down, the win feels excellent. Electric. She lets herself have it exactly long enough to descend three floors. By the time the doors open in the lobby, she is already thinking about her calendar. Johnson versus Johnson. Castellano versus Castellano. Three intake meetings scheduled for Thursday. Forward motion is the only motion that works.

She flags a cab on the street.

Her phone buzzes.

The message contains no text, only an address and a time. She recognizes the number immediately because some numbers burn themselves into your memory whether you want them to or not. Don Enzo Moreno. Her uncle. The man who paid for her law school tuition in unmarked cash envelopes ten years ago when she was twenty-two and broke and furious and had nowhere else to go. The same man she has been careful not to think too much about since.

She stares at the message for three seconds.

Then she gives the cabdriver her office address instead.

She can ignore this. She can pretend for the next several hours that she is a completely normal attorney in a completely normal city with no complicated debts to men who decide things with one phone call. It will not work. These things never work. But the attempt itself means something. The fact that she tries to walk away before she ultimately cannot.

Her office is on the forty-second floor of a building that smells like money and carpet cleaner. She works late. She reviews case files. She returns emails to clients who trust her with the intimate destruction of their marriages. She drinks coffee that goes cold beside her keyboard because she forgets to drink it and remembers it only once it has stopped being any good.

At 9:17 PM, when she has almost convinced herself this particular debt can be left unpaid, her phone buzzes again.

"You can come tonight or I send a car tomorrow. Your choice, little lawyer."

The word choice feels cruel. Zara knows better. In Don Enzo's world, choice is something you get to exercise only if you have already lost.

She closes her laptop.

She goes.