The Club Manager Announced Her Real Title Before Her Husband Could Finish Mocking Her-QuynhTranJP

Evan stared at the signature until his champagne glass tilted in his hand.

A thin stream of gold liquid spilled over the rim and ran down his wrist, into the cuff of the custom shirt he had spent fifteen minutes describing to the investors. He did not move. His mouth stayed open just enough to show the white edge of his teeth.

Ms. Reyes placed the document flat on the table.

Image

The paper made one small sound against the black linen.

Claudia reached for it first.

Ms. Reyes covered the page with two fingers. Her nails were short, pale pink, unshaking.

“Mrs. Voss,” she said, calm enough to cool the whole table, “do not touch my client’s property.”

Claudia pulled her hand back as if the folder had burned her.

The councilman’s fork hovered over his plate. Mara’s fingers slid away from Evan’s sleeve. One of the venture partners leaned sideways to read the first line, then sat back slowly, both palms flat beside his wineglass.

I could hear the ballroom rearranging itself around the truth.

Chairs scraped. Someone whispered my name. The club manager stepped aside and held one hand toward the small stage, where a microphone waited under a circle of white light.

Evan swallowed.

“Natalie,” he said, and my name sounded different in his mouth now. Smaller. Useful. “This is a misunderstanding.”

I looked at the wet stain spreading across his cuff.

He followed my eyes, then finally lowered the glass.

At 8:46 p.m., Ms. Reyes turned the folder toward him.

“Page seven,” she said. “You signed an acknowledgment of separate intellectual property ownership eighteen months ago, witnessed by your own attorney. You also signed a spousal non-interference clause before Dr. Halden’s Series B financing closed.”

Evan gave a short laugh that had no air inside it.

“That was a household document.”

“No,” Ms. Reyes said. “That was the document your wife asked you to read.”

The first venture partner took his glasses off and cleaned them with a napkin that was already clean.

Evan looked at him.

“Greg, don’t be ridiculous. We can still talk.”

Greg put his glasses back on.

“We used Halden Medical’s prototype name in your materials,” he said. “You told us you controlled the licensing path.”

Read More