He Humiliated His Wife At A Gala. The Trust Hit Back By Midnight-myhoa

I didn’t cry when Grayson Thorne asked me for a divorce in front of three hundred people.

That scared him more than tears ever could.

The ballroom at The Whitaker House was built for rich people who believed history belonged to whoever could afford the chandelier.

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That night, those chandeliers poured gold over black marble floors, white roses, silver trays, and champagne glasses so thin they clicked like teeth.

The air smelled like lemon polish, lilies, and old money trying very hard not to sweat.

I sat at the front table in a black dress Eleanor Thorne had once called “quiet enough,” which was her way of saying she approved only because she could forget I was wearing it.

Grayson stood onstage beside her in a tuxedo that fit him too well.

My husband always looked best when he was about to disappoint someone.

He had that soft, tragic expression on his face, the one he used when he needed people to believe he was suffering through his own cruelty.

Beside him stood Sloane Avery in a silver gown, holding a tissue under one eye like she had been cast as the injured party.

She was lovely.

That was never the problem.

The problem was that she smiled like she had already measured my place at the table and found it comfortable.

Eleanor tapped the rim of her champagne flute with one manicured nail, and the room quieted around her.

Three hundred people turned toward the stage.

Board members.

Family friends.

Donors.

Old classmates.

Women who had kissed my cheek in powder rooms and then asked Eleanor whether I was “adjusting.”

Men who called Grayson “son” because men with money collect sons wherever they go.

I had been married into that room for seven years.

Seven years of remembering birthdays for people who forgot mine.

Seven years of writing thank-you notes Eleanor signed.

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