Forty-six. Senior financial officer at Halbrook Development Group—one of the region’s biggest real estate firms and one of our company’s largest clients. I’d met him at two holiday dinners and once at a charity golf event. Smooth voice. Perfect suits. The kind of man who made eye contact like he was granting you something.
And married.
When Claire came out, I understood the outline of the betrayal—but not its core. The core revealed itself two days later.
I work as operations director for a construction supply firm in Northern Virginia. We had been negotiating a major contract with Halbrook for months—big enough to secure promotions, prevent layoffs, drive expansion. On Wednesday morning, my CEO called me in.
“We have a problem.”
Halbrook had withdrawn from the deal. Not delayed—withdrawn. Worse, a competitor submitted a nearly identical structure at a price that could only exist with inside knowledge. Our margins. Our projections. Our vulnerabilities.
Someone had handed them everything.
I sat there, and Claire’s message flashed in my mind.
If he finds out about the transfer, we’re both finished.
Claire wasn’t just involved with Ethan.
She was feeding him information. And he was paying for it.
That night, I didn’t ask where she’d been.
“How’s Halbrook doing lately?” I asked instead.
The shift in her face was subtle—but I saw it.
“Why?”
“They pulled a project.”