My Husband Thought Julian Came To Save His Company — Then The Screen Turned On-QuynhTranJP

Mark Peterson arrived at Julian Croft’s office at 9:42 a.m. carrying three leather folders, a fake smile, and the kind of confidence desperate men wear when they believe a richer man is about to rescue them.

I walked beside him in a cream wool coat, my hair pinned low, my wedding ring still on my finger.

Mark had insisted I come.

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“Mr. Croft respects you,” he had whispered in the elevator, smoothing his tie for the fourth time. “Smile when you see him, okay? We need him to feel like we’re stable.”

Stable.

The word sat on my tongue like metal.

The Croft Enterprises lobby smelled of polished stone, espresso, and cold money. Every surface reflected something: the steel elevator doors, the glass security desk, the silver letters mounted twenty feet high on the wall.

CROFT ENTERPRISES.

Mark looked up at the name like it was scripture.

I looked at it like a door already open.

At 10:00 a.m. exactly, a woman in a charcoal suit led us into a conference room overlooking Lower Manhattan. The morning sun cut through the glass walls in clean white lines. A long black table waited in the center. Bottled water stood in perfect rows. At the far end sat Julian Croft, calm, dry, and untouched by the storm he had brought into my apartment the night before.

Six lawyers sat beside him.

Mark noticed them and slowed.

His smile twitched.

“Mr. Croft,” he said, extending his hand. “Thank you for seeing us so quickly.”

Julian did not stand.

He glanced at Mark’s hand, then at the folders under his arm.

“Sit.”

Mark laughed nervously and lowered his hand. “Of course.”

I took the seat Julian’s assistant indicated, two chairs away from Mark. That tiny distance made Mark’s eyes flick toward me.

He wanted me close enough to decorate him.

Julian wanted me close enough to watch him fall.

Mark opened the first folder and began before anyone asked.

“I brought everything you requested. Debt summaries, operating reports, lender correspondence. Peterson Industries is in a temporary cash-flow crunch, but with the right strategic investment, we can scale fast.”

His voice was smooth. Practiced. Almost convincing.

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