Summary of Chapter 975 – A turning point in Never Mistake a Queen for a Lapdog by Serena Kingsley
Chapter 975 immerses the reader in an emotional journey within the world of Never Mistake a Queen for a Lapdog, written by Serena Kingsley. With the hallmarks of Romance literature, this chapter balances emotion, tension, and revelation. Perfect for readers seeking narrative depth and authentic human connections.
"Madeline and I aren't what you think," Felix denied once again.
In the past, he never bothered explaining these things, feeling it was unnecessary.
But after this long cold war, he belatedly realized that she seemed to truly mind Madeline's existence.
"Stop!" Claire's patience wore thin.
She let him in to discuss the divorce, not his precious Madeline.
"Our topic today is strictly the divorce. If you bring up anything else, get out right now."
Seeing her unyielding attitude, Felix felt a lump of frustration lodged in his chest.
After cooling off for so long, she still wanted a divorce?
His eyes darkened intensely. "I promised you before, as long as we don't divorce, you can name your terms. That promise still stands."
Claire couldn't understand.
Why?
Why was he so unwilling to divorce?
A surge of irritation rose within her, her expression turning ice-cold.
"Also, the shares I offered you... I can add another five percent. Ten percent of the Quigley Group. Think it over carefully."
Ten percent of the Quigley Group...
That was indeed the utmost sincerity he could offer.
It took Felix three years working at the bottom of the Quigley Group, proving himself with solid results, to earn five percent of the shares.
It wasn't until he agreed to marry her that his grandfather transferred the remaining forty-six percent to him.
Share percentages were crucial to the controller of a corporation.
So initially, Felix had only offered three.
When he increased it to five, it was already a risk.
If she took that five percent and allied with other shareholders, he could lose his voice on the board of directors.
Now, he was offering ten percent.
That wasn't a risk anymore; it was a desperate gamble.
Unfortunately.
He misunderstood one crucial detail.

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