The Board Meeting Stopped When His Legal Wife’s Name Hit The Projector-quetran123

My phone stayed lit in my palm while nobody in Conference Room B moved.

MARRIAGE RECORD CONFIRMED — CERTIFIED COPY READY.

The words were small on the screen, but they changed the size of the room. Elliot’s hand remained locked around the back of the chair. Brielle stood beside him with her fingers curled against the polished table, the pale blue invitation lying between us like a loaded object.

Image

The attorney, Marsha Bell, did not raise her voice.

“Mr. Vaughn,” she said, “I asked you a question.”

The projector hummed behind him. Rain tapped the glass wall in thin silver lines. Someone’s pen rolled once across the table, hit a legal pad, and stopped.

Elliot turned slowly toward the projected marriage license. Our names covered the wall in county-stamped black text.

Elliot James Vaughn.

Nora Elise Vaughn.

Filed eleven years earlier.

Active.

Not dissolved.

Brielle’s eyes moved from the wall to me, then to Elliot.

“You said she was your ex,” she whispered.

Elliot’s jaw flexed.

“Not now.”

It was the same tone he used with waiters, receptionists, junior associates, and once, years ago, with me when I corrected him in front of a client. Soft enough to sound controlled. Sharp enough to leave a mark.

Marsha clicked something on her laptop.

A second document filled the wall.

The condo deed.

Two names.

His and mine.

Then another.

The Mayfield ownership amendment.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *