She Left Her Ring At The Gala, Then His Firm Started Falling Apart-paupau

The first thing Nathan noticed was not my face.

It was my hand.

For eleven years, that ring had been the quiet proof he kept beside him at dinners, galas, fundraisers, and investor meetings.

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It said I belonged there.

It said every rumor could be softened by the sight of a wife standing close enough to make him look respectable.

So when I slipped it off in the middle of the Silver Coast resort ballroom and placed it on the glass table beside him, Nathan stared at the empty place on my finger like the room had tilted.

The chandeliers above us were bright enough to make every champagne flute shine.

White roses lined the tables in expensive arrangements, and the orchestra played something slow, tasteful, and almost cruel.

Nathan was still holding Serena.

His palm rested low on the back of her red dress, and she stayed close because staying close had always been the point.

For months, he had hidden her behind late meetings, urgent dinners, hotel conference calls, and business trips that somehow left perfume on his jacket.

That night, he stopped hiding.

He danced with her in front of everyone.

Investors saw it.

Staff saw it.

The wives saw it, too, and some of them gave me that particular look women reserve for another woman being humiliated in public.

It was pity mixed with relief.

Better her than me.

A woman beside me had leaned close before I walked toward them.

“They look perfect together, don’t they?” she murmured.

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