Lila looked at him as though she needed confirmation he was real. “Ethan,” she said shakily, “you told me—”
“Not now,” he snapped, not even glancing at her.
The cruelty was almost breathtaking. He didn’t defend her. He didn’t apologize. He silenced her.
That was when the story shifted. It wasn’t merely an affair. It was a power imbalance—a man collecting people like trophies.
I turned to Lila. “You deserve better than being someone’s secret,” I said. “But I’m not here to rescue you. I’m here to stop rescuing him.”
Ethan’s jaw tightened. “Let’s go upstairs. We’ll talk.”
“No,” I said simply.
He reached for my elbow, and I moved away quickly. The receptionist let out a tight, startled noise, like she was debating whether to step in. Ethan’s hand lingered awkwardly in midair before dropping once he noticed how many people were staring.
“Marina,” he said, shifting into that gentler tone he used whenever he wanted something from me. “You’re overreacting.”
Overreacting. The word hit like spit.
I gave him a slow, chilling smile. “You don’t get to decide what my reaction should look like.”
I turned toward the receptionist. “Could you please call HR?”
Ethan’s eyes flared. “Don’t—”
But the receptionist, fully alert now, had already lifted the phone.
Lila’s composure cracked into something close to fear. “HR?” she murmured.
“Yes,” I said, keeping my eyes on Ethan. “Because if he’s been sleeping with an intern, this isn’t just a marriage issue. It’s a company issue.”
Ethan scanned the lobby, and for the first time that morning, I saw real fear—not about losing me, but about losing his image. His standing. The polished reputation he’d curated so carefully.
He lowered his voice. “We can fix this.”
I shook my head. “You can’t fix what you did. You can only face it.”
Then the lobby doors opened again, and two women stepped inside—HR badges clipped neatly, clipboards in hand, faces calm in a way that promised consequences.
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