The Gala Kiss That Made A Charleston CEO Lose His Empire By Dawn-hothiyenvy_5

The first camera flash went off before Dominic’s mouth touched Sierra’s.

That is still the detail I remember most clearly.

Not the gasp from the mayor’s wife.

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Not the way the string quartet died in the middle of a note.

Not the champagne flute sweating in my hand until the stem felt slick.

The flash came first, white and hard, turning the grand hall of the Gibbes Museum of Art into something colder than a ballroom.

Dominic Stone stood beneath a twenty-foot projection of the company logo and kissed Sierra Vance in front of two hundred cameras.

He was my husband of twelve years.

She was his executive vice president.

And everyone in that room understood the difference between a mistake and a decision.

His hand was around her waist.

Her fingers were on his tuxedo lapel.

The crowd had been applauding him thirty seconds earlier for a speech about vision, legacy, and the future of Charleston.

Then he kissed her as if I were not standing thirty feet away in a white dress he had already told me was “too severe” for the evening.

That was Dominic’s word for anything I chose without his approval.

Severe.

Difficult.

Unhelpful.

Cold.

A man will call you cold when he has spent years depending on your restraint.

The kiss lasted only a few seconds, but public humiliation does not need much time.

It only needs witnesses.

There were donors near the stage, investors in navy suits, journalists, museum patrons, city people with careful smiles, and women who had spent years telling me how lucky I was to be married to a man like Dominic Stone.

The cameras started clicking again after the first silence broke.

Click.

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