Part 2: “Charm is useful at dinner, Evie,” he had said, fastening the clasp of her mother’s pearl bracelet around her wrist. “Character is what remains when nobody is clapping.”
She had kissed his cheek and told him not to worry.
Now, in the darkness of the penthouse, she wished she had listened better.
Her lawyer, Naomi Pierce, had listened closely when Evelyn called that afternoon. Naomi had been Conrad Hart’s attorney for twenty-six years, a woman with silver-streaked hair, precise suits, and the calm voice of someone who had watched powerful men underestimate quiet women and lose.
After reviewing the files Evelyn sent, Naomi had said, “This is not only adultery. This is financial misconduct. If foundation money supported his relationship with Brielle Monroe, he may have exposed himself to civil and possibly criminal consequences.”
Evelyn had gripped the edge of the kitchen island until one nail bent backward.
“What do I do?”
Naomi did not pity her. Evelyn was grateful for that. Pity would have made her collapse.
“You protect yourself,” Naomi said. “You protect your child. And you stop letting Preston decide what this story is allowed to become.”
Now the elevator doors opened.
Preston stepped into the penthouse smiling.
The smile hurt more than any confession could have.
He had the cruel beauty of a man who had never had to pay full price for the damage he caused. His dark hair was mussed, his tie hung loose around his neck, and his coat was slung over one shoulder. He smelled like champagne, hotel soap, and Brielle.
Evelyn did not stand.
Preston stopped when he saw her.
“What are you doing awake?”
His tone carried no concern. Only irritation.
Evelyn looked at him for several seconds before answering. “Waiting.”
He gave a short laugh and tossed his coat over the back of a chair. “Waiting for what? A scene?”
The old Evelyn would have lowered her eyes. The old Evelyn would have swallowed the pain and asked where he had been, even though she already knew. The old Evelyn would have been afraid of sounding needy, jealous, dramatic, pregnant.
This Evelyn only rested her fingers on the envelope.
Preston followed the movement. His gaze sharpened.
“What’s that?”
Evelyn slid the envelope one inch toward him.
“Open it.”
“It’s three in the morning.”
“I know.”
“I’m exhausted.”
“So am I.”
The words came out without anger, and that unsettled him more than shouting would have.
Preston ran a hand through his hair. “I am not doing this right now. If you’re upset because I had to work—”
Evelyn lifted her eyes.
He stopped.
Not because she interrupted him, but because he did not find the woman he expected. He did not find the wife who always tried to understand. He did not find the Evelyn who asked whether he had eaten dinner, who pretended not to notice another woman’s perfume, who accepted excuses in the hope that someday he might become ashamed of giving them.
He found silence.
And silence, when a wounded woman finally owns it, can be more frightening than tears.
Preston took the envelope. He opened it with an impatient flick, pulled out the papers, and read the first line.
His face changed.
Then the second line.
Then the third.
“No,” he said.
Evelyn remained still.
“No, Evelyn. You cannot do this.”
“I already have.”
His head snapped up. “Legal separation? Account freezes? An audit?” His voice rose. “What the hell is this?”
—————————————
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