He Tried Selling Her Hotel While His Mistress Wore Her Stolen Pearl Brooch-QuynhTranJP

The elevator doors opened to a quiet hallway lined with cream walls, brass sconces, and carpet so thick my heels barely made a sound.

Mark stood behind me with his glass still halfway to his mouth.

Vanessa had stopped touching the brooch.

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The general manager, Mr. Ellis, held the black envelope against his chest like it weighed more than paper. The two security officers did not look at my husband. They looked at me.

“Mrs. Callahan,” Mr. Ellis said, “the board is assembled.”

I stepped into the elevator.

For one second, Mark did not move. His smile stayed on his face, but his eyes had begun to work behind it. Calculating. Rearranging. Looking for the version of reality where he still controlled the room.

Then he followed.

Vanessa followed him.

Of course she did.

The doors closed with all four of us inside: me, my husband, his mistress, and the stolen pearl brooch pressed against her throat.

The elevator smelled faintly of brass polish and somebody’s expensive cologne. The floor numbers glowed upward in soft white light. Mark shifted once, the ice in his glass knocking against the side.

“Claire,” he said gently, still using the voice he used when there were witnesses nearby. “Whatever game you think you’re playing, this is not the place.”

I watched the numbers climb.

13.

14.

Vanessa let out a little laugh through her nose.

“Maybe we should all calm down,” she said. “Investors hate instability.”

Mr. Ellis turned his head just enough to look at her brooch.

Then the elevator opened.

Suite 1408 was not a bedroom. Mark knew that the second he saw the double doors already propped open and the long walnut table inside.

Twelve board members sat under warm recessed lights. A court reporter waited near the wall with her machine ready. Our outside counsel, Marianne Greer, stood at the head of the table in a charcoal blazer, one hand resting on a blue folder marked with my legal name.

On the center of the table sat three objects.

The first was the black metal owner access card.

The second was the purchase agreement for the hotel.

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