I slid the portfolio across the table. Adrian smirked and flipped it open, expecting signed divorce papers. Instead, he found a stack of LLC filings, bank statements, and a single photograph of a building in downtown LA. His smile died first. Sienna leaned over, then frowned. “What is this?” she whispered. I took a slow sip of water. “That,” I said, “is Holloway Holdings. The company that owns the office tower your firm leases. The warehouse in Vernon. The condo in Santa Monica you told everyone you bought last year.” Adrian’s face went gray. “Eight years ago,” I continued, “when your father refused to give you seed money, I used my grandmother’s inheritance to start your company. You insisted my name stay off everything ‘for tax reasons.’ So I built my own. Quietly. Every commission you bragged about, I reinvested mine. Every property you flipped, I bought the land underneath.” The waiter set down our entrees. Nobody moved. “Your investors called me this morning,” I said. “They were curious why their landlord shared my maiden name. By the time you finish that steak, Adrian, three of them will have pulled out. Marcus already did at four-fifteen.” Adrian’s phone buzzed on the table. Then again. Then four times in a row. Sienna stood up slowly, clutching her purse. “You said she was a housewife,” she hissed. “She was,” I said gently, “until he asked for a divorce.” I stood, smoothed my blouse, and laid a crisp hundred on the table. “Dinner’s on me. Consider it the last thing I’ll ever pay for in your name.” As I walked toward the elevator, I heard the chair scrape behind me, heard him call my name the way he used to before the money, before Sienna, before he forgot who built him. I didn’t turn around. The elevator doors closed on the best view in Beverly Hills, and for the first time in eight years, the silence belonged to me.
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