A/N Thank you for being patient with me... sometimes I don't think this story is the best choice for literotica, but thanks for reading it anyways.
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JAAN
Later
In Jaan's wildest dreams he had never once imagined it would end the way it did, but now he sat staring out the window in his spartan kitchen wondering how he had managed to fuck it up so badly. It always ended with one answer.
Ten months ago (had it really been that long?), he sat across from Marlena in her lawyer's paneled office and signed away. He wanted her to be happy- she certainly wasn't getting that with him.
He stared at her. Her flaxen hair was cut short, close to her face, her bold hazel eyes stared off into the distance. Not at him but beyond him- truly beyond him, she wasn't interested in anything that he had to say anymore.
"So, we had to bring you all back here to update the terms of the separation." Marlena's lawyer was slick, one of those young up and coming, top of the law firm types who was gunning for partnership. He wore Ralph Lauren Black Label suits, crisp white shirts with spread lapel collars, and sleek leather monk shoes with solid yet subtle brass buckles.
This was the type of guy Marlena should be with.
"Divorce," Marlena corrected him and shifted in her seat. Her usually tan skin was darker, her dark eyelashes framing those eyes that Jaan couldn't look away from. Maybe she had taken a vacation? Damn, she really was beautiful, the slenderness of her wrists, her long elegant hands and perfectly buffed fingernails. She had on a beautiful white dress and sky blue cardigan that belied the 35-degree weather outside. Her entire appearance screamed cleansed. She was getting rid of him.
Marlena's lawyer gave her a glance and a small smile, "That's right the terms of the divorce. Jaan, am I to understand that two weeks ago you sold your stake at the magazine, Echo Point?"
That's right. He was bought out. He had owned 75% of it. And now he owned 0% of it but was suddenly $30 million dollars richer. He had no idea that the magazine was even worth that much. When he had asked for a buyout he was shocked, flabbergasted really, to find out that they would be buying him out for $30 million dollars. He had called Marlena immediately. They needed to renegotiate.
"Yes," Jaan nodded his head at the lawyer and tried to catch Marlena's eyes.
"And was Marlena with you the entire time you worked at this magazine."
"Yes." Well most of it- Jaan had worked there for 15 years, 10 of them he had been with Marlena, 8 of which, they had been married.
"So it seems obvious to us that of this money, she is entitled to half."
"Yes." Jaan wasn't going to fight. He didn't even bring a lawyer. He was more than ready to give Marlena half of the money. 30 million? Jaan had no idea what to do with that kind of money. If she wanted half she could take it. After all she had put up with him for years while he dicked around at that place, coming home late, going to parties, hanging out with B to D list art celebrities. She had married him, stayed with him, loved him, and had always remained vaguely aware, that his heart, his mind, stayed somewhere else.
Marlena looked at him, "Are you serious?"
Jaan smiled at her, he wanted things to be good, "I called you didn't I?"
She shook her head, "You can't just give me 15 million dollars Jaan!" she yelled.
Jaan laughed, "Why not? I want you to have it. This is what we came here for right? To renegotiate? Well that's what I negotiate. You take the $15 million or you get nothing."
Marlena shrunk back away from the table, "Don't be stupid Jaan."
"Only if you don't." he smiled at her.
She looked at him, straight on now, her eyes wide with shock. What exactly was he playing at? Marlena still hadn't figured Jaan out. What exactly was it that he wanted from her? Now, just as at the beginning of their relationship, Jaan was as vague as ever. He called her on the phone to tell her he sold Echo Point, what was she supposed to take from that?
"That's it, I sold Echo Point." He said to her.
"Ok..." Marlena had picked up her phone warily when she saw his name flash up on the screen. She was sitting in their home, the one they had moved into after the engagement. The large, spacious, 3 bedroom in a crown heights, a brownstone, that she had begged Jaan to move to, far away from his shitty LES loft which she hated. It was a four-floor walk-up, drafty beyond all imagination, that stayed below freezing most of the winter and was a humid hot mess during the summer.
They were in the middle of divorce proceedings, they had already been separated for nearly 8 weeks, this after what seemed like 4 years of an endless downward spiral from a marriage that had been barely good for 4 years. So now, after 8 years of marriage, they were getting a divorce.
"I don't know, I'm just- I don't know who else to tell."
"What about your mom?"
"I'll call her later"
"So... How much did you sell it for? Do you think I need to call my lawyer?" The divorce proceedings had been ok so far. Jaan willingly gave up the brownstone in crown heights, along with their car, everything in their shared account, and more than half of what he had in his personal bank account from working at the magazine. There had been no argument whatsoever, which, Marlena hated to admit, made her even angrier about the entire divorce. She was hoping there would be something, some way to get a rise out of him, but so far he had been happy to give her half, (or everything in some cases) of whatever they had shared. That enigmatic, inscrutable gaze of his, the way she was never quite sure with him had always excited her. She never knew what he would say next, or exactly what he was thinking. She spent years with Jaan just trying to figure him out. In the end it was this very inscrutableness, the mystery that made her resent him, it had her hating him to his core.
"I guess." Jaan was quiet for a moment, "I guess, yea, yea you should call him."
"Ok so, I mean, we're not supposed to have contact like this so- I'll just call my lawyer and he can set something up, so we can meet next week and talk about it?"
"Ok, Ok that sounds good."