At The County Clerk’s Counter, My Maiden Name Made The Harrison Fortune Shake-quetran123

The glass doors opened with a soft hydraulic hiss, and Attorney Marcus Vale walked in carrying a navy legal folder under one arm.

Cordelia turned first.

Not fully. Just enough for one pearl earring to catch the fluorescent light while her neck stiffened above the collar of her navy suit.

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Tyler followed her gaze.

His face changed before Marcus reached the counter.

Because Tyler knew him.

Everyone in Greenwich financial circles knew Marcus Vale. He did not handle parking tickets, messy divorces, or polite family disagreements. He handled corporate control, emergency injunctions, and wealthy people who had mistaken silence for weakness.

Marcus stopped beside me and placed the navy folder next to my black one.

“Jordan,” he said, calm as a bank vault. “The board is assembled. We have fifteen minutes before the press check-in.”

Cordelia’s fingers tightened around the gold clasp of her purse.

“The board?” she asked.

Marcus looked at her as if she had spoken from across a crowded lobby.

“Mrs. Harrison.”

Just two words. No warmth. No surprise.

Tyler gave a small laugh that landed flat on the metal counter.

“Marcus, there’s been some confusion.”

“No,” Marcus said. “There hasn’t.”

The clerk’s office went quiet in the way public rooms go quiet when strangers smell money trouble. A man near the license window stopped filling out his form. A young couple with a stroller lowered their voices. Somewhere behind the partition, a printer kept spitting paper with a dry mechanical rhythm.

Brielle looked from Marcus to me, then down at the folder.

“Jordan,” she said, almost sweetly, “what is this supposed to be?”

I capped the pen I had used to sign my maiden name.

“A name correction.”

Cordelia’s eyes sharpened.

“You don’t correct a name with a corporate attorney.”

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