Our son Daniel whispered, “Dad… what are you doing?”
Victor chuckled. “Living honestly for once.”
Honestly. After twenty-five years of building his reputation, entertaining his clients, cleaning up his scandals, remembering every birthday, every favor, every lie.
I quietly set my fork down.
Victor looked at me with exaggerated sympathy. “Evelyn, don’t make this harder than it needs to be.”
“Harder?” I repeated.
Clara lowered her gaze. “Mrs. Hale, you deserve peace… not a marriage without passion.”
Some guests stared at their plates. Others looked at me as if they were witnessing a disaster unfold.
Victor leaned closer. “I’ll be generous. The lake house, a monthly allowance—you can keep your charity work.”
A few people relaxed at that. Generous. As if discarding me with a property and a stipend deserved applause.
My eyes drifted to our wedding photo across the room. Back then, Victor had nothing—no company, no mansion, no private jet. Just charm, debt, and ambition far bigger than his means.
I had the money.
He had simply forgotten—because I let him.
For twenty-five years, I signed quietly in the background. I introduced him to bankers who greeted me by my maiden name when he wasn’t listening. I built the foundation he stood on while he accepted the spotlight, the awards, the praise.
So I smiled.
That unsettled him.
“Is that all?” he asked.
“Aren’t you going to react?” Clara added, almost disappointed.