His Mistress Flaunted A Ring, But His Wife Held The Company Papers-lbsuong

My husband’s mistress announced their engagement during our anniversary dinner, and for a few seconds, the entire ballroom believed they were watching the end of me.

That was the part Nathan counted on.

He thought I would cry.

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He thought I would shake.

He thought I would sit there in my black dress and pearl earrings while Vanessa Pierce lifted that diamond ring toward the chandelier like it was some kind of trophy.

Most of all, he thought I needed his name to survive.

Nathan Cole had made a career out of misunderstanding quiet women.

The night began with gold light and expensive flowers.

The Grand Kensington Ballroom had been dressed for our fifteenth anniversary with cream roses, white candles, and enough champagne to make every investor in the room feel generous.

The air smelled like polished wood, perfume, and sugar from the little dessert plates the waiters carried past our table.

A string quartet played near the doors.

Soft music floated through the room like nothing ugly could happen beneath it.

I sat beside Nathan in a simple black dress, wearing the pearl earrings my mother had given me on my wedding day.

They were small pearls, too small for Nathan’s taste.

He liked diamonds, the louder the better, because Nathan believed wealth should introduce itself before a person opened their mouth.

My mother had believed the opposite.

She used to tell me that real value did not need to shout.

I did not understand how much I would need that lesson until fifteen years into my marriage, when the man beside me decided to humiliate me in a ballroom full of people who owed him favors.

Cole Global Industries did not begin in Nathan’s imagination.

It began in the second bedroom of the first apartment we rented, back when the carpet had a stain by the closet and the radiator knocked every night at 3:00 a.m.

Nathan had the confidence.

I had the spreadsheets.

Nathan had the voice.

I had the first vendor list, the early client contracts, the operating agreement, the bank presentation, and the calendar that told him which room to walk into and what not to say once he got there.

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