She had secretly invested in a failing business. Loans she guaranteed. Losses she hid. Ethan offered a way out—information for money.
What began as strategy became dependency. Then an affair.
“You sold out my company,” I said.
“I was trying to fix it before you got hurt.”
“Before you got caught.”
She didn’t respond.
That morning, I had already sent everything to legal counsel—my company’s and Halbrook’s.
While she stood there, Ethan was already under investigation.
Her phone rang.
Ethan.
She went pale.
“Answer it,” I said.
She didn’t.
Then calls from her firm followed.
She understood then.
This wasn’t private anymore.
“What did you do?” she whispered.
“I told the truth to the people you lied to.”