I stepped into the notary’s office with my spine straight and my breathing steady, already aware that my past was waiting inside.
I didn’t need to see them to feel their presence.
The air carried the scent of polished marble and quiet authority—the kind of atmosphere built by people who had never needed to ask for mercy. Everything about the place suggested that emotions were unwelcome here, something to be folded away and hidden like a damp umbrella.
My heels echoed across the marble floor in a rhythm I had practiced in my mind. Not to appear confident—but to stay in control.
I crossed my arms, not for comfort, but to keep my pulse from betraying me.
The receptionist gave a polite, rehearsed smile and gestured toward a narrow hallway, as if this were just another routine appointment.
As if I weren’t walking toward the very room where my marriage had been dismantled and my dignity quietly traded like collateral.
Still, I walked forward.
Not for reconciliation.
Not for explanations.
I had come to close something that had lingered far too long.
And somewhere deep inside, I already knew one thing with certainty:
This meeting would not unfold the way they expected.
At the end of the hallway, the conference room door stood slightly open.
Inside, faint sounds drifted out—papers shuffling, the low scrape of a chair against wood, someone clearing their throat.
Then the noise stopped.
Silence settled, sudden and deliberate.
As if someone sensed my presence before I even stepped inside.
I pushed the door open.
And there they were.
Adrian Whitlock sat near the center of the long table, leaning back with the relaxed confidence of a man who believed every room naturally belonged to him.
His charcoal suit was immaculate.
I recognized the color instantly.
Years ago, I used to press suits that shade with careful hands, believing—naively—that love could soften arrogance.
The same polished smile curved across his lips now. The one that had once disguised lies as charm.
Beside him sat Lillian Moore—once his assistant, now his partner.
Her copper hair was styled to command attention she hadn’t truly earned, and her sharp eyes scanned me carefully, like she was silently taking inventory.
Her dress was expensive.
But too precise. Too calculated.
It wasn’t fashion.
It was a statement.
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