Her Husband Planned To Steal Her Company Before The Toast-thuyhien

Emily Carter smiled because everyone in the ballroom expected her to smile.

That was the first rule of rooms like that.

You smiled when the chandeliers were bright, when the champagne was poured, when the string quartet played something soft enough to make rich people feel gentle.

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You smiled when guests told you your marriage looked perfect.

You smiled when they praised your husband for standing beside you, even if you were the one who had spent ten years building the thing they were celebrating.

The ballroom smelled of roses, vanilla frosting, and expensive perfume.

Warm light slid across white tablecloths and polished floors.

Near the registration table, a small American flag stood beside a framed charity certificate, the kind of tasteful detail David always said made people feel grounded.

Emily had placed it there herself that morning.

She had placed everything herself.

The flowers.

The seating cards.

The donor packets.

The annual client gifts arranged in cream boxes near the marble entryway.

It was supposed to be the most important night of the year for Carter Home Design.

It was supposed to prove that the company had survived the supply delays, the bad quarter, the lost warehouse lease, and every whispered question about whether a business built from a garage could really compete with firms three times its size.

Emily knew the answer because she had lived it.

She had started Carter Home Design at a folding table in their garage ten years earlier.

Back then, her inventory was stacked beside paint cans and an old lawn mower.

She answered client emails at midnight with a paper coffee cup going cold beside her laptop.

She loaded fabric samples into the family SUV before sunrise.

David used to help.

That was the part people never understood later.

He had not always been cruel.

At the beginning, he brought her coffee and carried heavy boxes.

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