For a second, the lobby went silent the way rooms do right before a fire alarm—everyone instinctively holding their breath, waiting to see which direction the damage will spread.
Lila’s mouth opened, but no sound came out. Her eyes flicked to the suitcases, then back to my face. She looked like someone who’d just been handed a live animal and didn’t know where to put it.
“I— I don’t understand,” she finally managed, voice thin.
“Oh, you do,” I said. Calm, almost polite. My heart was hammering, but I refused to let it show. “Ethan Lawson. Your boss. My husband.”
Behind us, the receptionist had frozen with her phone halfway to her ear. Two men in suits slowed down as they walked past, pretending not to stare while staring anyway.
Lila’s cheeks flushed a furious red. “I’m not— this is— you’re making a scene.”
“I’m delivering luggage,” I replied. “Scenes are optional.”
She flinched as if I’d slapped her. “He told me you were separated.”
There it was. The script. The classic lie men use because it sounds clean. Like divorce is a polite hallway you’re already walking down rather than a wall you smash through.
I leaned in just enough that only she could hear. “He wore his wedding ring to dinner with you.”
Her eyes widened, then narrowed. “How do you—”
“I know everything,” I said, straightening. “The calendar invites. The messages. The voice notes. The little heart emojis. The part where he tells you he can’t stop thinking about you and then comes home and asks me if I want Thai or Italian.”
A whisper rippled through the lobby. Someone behind me muttered, “Oh my God,” like they were watching a reality show.
Lila’s hands curled into fists. “This is harassment.”
I laughed once, sharp. “Harassment is what he did—using his position, your inexperience, and the thrill of secrecy.”
At that, one of the coworkers near her shifted uncomfortably. Good. Let them feel it. Let them remember this the next time they congratulated a powerful man for being “charismatic.”
The elevator dinged. The doors opened.
Ethan stepped out.
He was mid-sentence on a phone call, smiling, tie perfectly knotted. He looked so sure of himself that for a split second I felt dizzy—like my brain couldn’t reconcile this polished stranger with the man whose voice notes I’d heard whispering promises into someone else’s ear.
His gaze swept the lobby and landed on me.
The smile died.
“Marina?” he said into the phone, too loudly. “I—I have to call you back.”
He ended the call with a thumb jab and walked toward me, quick and controlled, like he thought he could steer this back into privacy by sheer will.
“What are you doing here?” he hissed under his breath when he got close.
I stepped aside so he could see the suitcases at Lila’s feet.
“I brought your things,” I said, loud enough for everyone to hear. “Since you’ve been living two lives, I figured it was time you chose one in public.”
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