I picked up the pen. Marcus exhaled, victorious, already glancing at Brielle like the prize was secured. Then I set the pen back down. “Before I sign,” I said gently, “I think your lawyer should review section four.” The room stilled. His attorney flipped pages, frowning. I slid my own folder forward — a slim navy one I’d carried in without anyone noticing. Inside were the original incorporation documents of Hale-Whitfield Holdings, the parent company that owned 68% of Marcus’s empire. My maiden name was Whitfield. My father had quietly transferred his shares into a trust the week Marcus proposed. I was the sole beneficiary. “You didn’t marry into my family’s money, Marcus,” I said. “You married into my family’s leash.” His face drained. The CFO stood up so fast his chair scraped. Brielle’s manicured hand flew to her mouth. I turned to the board members — men who had golfed with my father, who had watched me grow up at company galas. “Effective immediately, I’m invoking the morality clause in Marcus’s executive contract. Adultery, misuse of corporate funds for the Aspen condo, and the unauthorized jet flights to Cabo. All documented.” I slid a second folder forward. Receipts. Flight logs. Photos. Marcus lunged for it, but his own lawyer pulled it away, already shaking his head. “You’re terminated, Marcus. Without severance. The penthouse reverts to the trust. The Tesla is leased through the company. And the divorce?” I finally picked up his pen and signed my name in clean, unhurried strokes. “I accept your terms. Nothing but the clothes on my back.” I stood, smoothed my blazer, and walked to the door. Then I paused. “Oh, and Brielle? HR will need your badge. Conflict of interest.” The last thing I heard before the elevator doors closed was Marcus screaming my name like it was a prayer he’d forgotten how to say.
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