I stepped into the kitchen, dialed my assistant Marcus, and said only four words: “Bring the Rothwell folder.” Then I poured myself a sparkling water and walked back into the dining room, apron still on. Vanessa was mid-toast, wine glass raised, telling everyone how she’d ‘finally taught David’s little wife her place.’ The guests laughed politely. David looked at the floor. He’d been laughing politely for two years too. Marcus arrived in eleven minutes with a leather portfolio. I untied the apron, folded it, and set it on Vanessa’s dinner plate. “Since we’re doing announcements,” I said, “I have three.” The room went still. “One: the house you’re standing in isn’t David’s. It’s mine. Purchased outright in 2021.” Vanessa’s smile flickered. “Two: the firm where David works, Halston-Meyer? I acquired the parent company last quarter. As of Monday, I’m the majority shareholder.” David’s head snapped up. I hadn’t told him yet — I’d wanted it to be a dinner surprise, just the two of us. “Three,” I said, sliding the folder toward Vanessa, “the ‘small loan’ you took from David eighteen months ago to launch your boutique? He used our joint account. That makes me a creditor. My attorneys have been reviewing your books. You’re forty-one thousand dollars in arrears, Vanessa, and your lease is in default.” She opened the folder with shaking hands. Every page was tabbed. Every number circled. “You have thirty days,” I said gently, “to vacate the storefront my company now owns.” The room was so quiet I heard the candles hiss. David stood up slowly, walked around the table, and took my hand. “Get out of my wife’s house,” he said. Vanessa tried to speak. Nothing came. She grabbed her coat and left, heels clicking like a countdown. David turned to the guests. “Dinner’s over. Claire’s tired.” Later, in the kitchen, he pressed his forehead to mine and whispered, “Why didn’t you tell me sooner?” I smiled. “Because tonight, baby, you needed to see it.”
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