He fired his wife with a cardboard box waiting beside the door.
He promoted his mistress before the room even stopped whispering.
He forgot the quiet woman he discarded owned every wall around him.
Diana Frost did not cry when her husband ended her career in the same office she had secretly paid to build. She only sat very still, her hands folded in her lap, her knees together, her practical black flats planted on the polished floor while Seattle rain streaked down the glass behind Arthur Pendleton like thin silver knives. The office smelled of espresso, leather, floor wax, and the sharp expensive cologne Arthur wore whenever he wanted people to mistake him for a man born powerful instead of a man carefully dressed as one.
He sat behind the massive mahogany desk he had chosen because he said it “anchored the room.” Diana had smiled when he said that three years ago, watching him run his hand over the dark polished surface like a boy touching the hood of a car he never thought he would own. Back then, his wonder had still been sweet. Back then, his ambition had not yet become a language he used to insult everyone who remembered him before success.
Now he sat behind that same desk with his shoulders squared, his Milan-tailored jacket open, his silver watch flashing whenever he moved the Mont Blanc pen between his fingers. He was performing difficulty. Diana could see it in the softened mouth, the carefully lowered voice, the slight tilt of his head that suggested regret without requiring him to feel any.
Beside him sat Jonathan Croft from Human Resources, pale under the office lighting, a manila folder resting on his knees. Jonathan was looking everywhere except at Diana. That told her more than Arthur’s speech did. Jonathan was not cruel. He was simply employed, which in rooms like this often produced the same result.
“Diana,” Arthur said, and the way he used her name sounded almost formal, as if the woman across from him were a vendor whose contract had expired. “I want you to understand that this decision has nothing to do with us personally.”
Diana looked at him.
Of all the things he could have said, that was the one that almost made her laugh.
Nothing to do with us personally.
For seven years, she had slept beside him. For seven years, she had watched him become more certain of himself and less capable of gratitude. For seven years, she had hidden the truth of her wealth, her name, her influence, and her ownership because she had wanted one pure thing in her life that was not negotiated through money. She had wanted to be loved without being acquired.
And now he was firing her from her own company and calling it impersonal.
“I see,” she said.
Arthur seemed encouraged by her calm. “Ethere Dynamics is entering a new stage. We’ve reached a point where certain internal structures have to change. Accounting is being consolidated. Some roles are being eliminated.”
“Mine,” Diana said.
Jonathan flinched almost invisibly.
Arthur’s jaw tightened. He disliked interruption unless he was the one doing it. “Yes. Your role is one of them.”
“My accounting role.”
“Yes.”
“The one paying seventy-eight thousand dollars a year.”
Arthur exhaled through his nose, the way he did when he wanted to seem patient. “Diana, please don’t reduce this to salary. You don’t need the job. I make more than enough for both of us.”
That sentence hung in the office, heavy and absurd.
Diana’s face did not change.
Arthur continued, gaining confidence from what he mistook for submission. “Frankly, it has become awkward. My wife working in a subordinate position inside my company creates unnecessary optics. People talk. Investors notice these things. The board has concerns about professional boundaries.”
The board.
Diana lowered her gaze for one second to keep the amusement out of her eyes. Arthur still spoke of the board as though it belonged to him because its members allowed him to speak first at quarterly meetings. He still believed Oberon Capital was a distant investment syndicate managed by faceless men in darker rooms. He still believed the proxy directors answered to market logic, not to the woman sitting in a cardigan across from him.
Jonathan cleared his throat. “We’ve prepared a severance package. Six weeks of pay, continuation of medical benefits through the end of the month, and a standard non-disclosure agreement regarding internal company matters and the circumstances of your departure.”
He slid the folder across the desk.
Diana looked at the folder but did not touch it.
Arthur’s fingers stopped moving around the pen.
“Diana,” he said quietly, “don’t make this harder than it needs to be.”