
Beg On Your Knees: Erasing My CEO Husband
Chapter 2
The door to room 412 cracked open. I didn't wait to see who stood on the other side. A sudden spike of panic shoved me backward. I jammed my keycard into 411, slipped inside like a ghost, and let the heavy wood click shut just as the opposite door swung wide. I pressed my eye directly to the glass peephole.
Seraphina Thorne stepped out into the hallway. She wore a champagne silk robe. The sheer fabric clung tightly to her frame, leaving nothing to the imagination. She looked left, then right. Seeing the empty corridor, she turned back to 412.
"Nobody's out here," she called out lazily.
"Told you," Julian's arrogant voice drifted into the hall.
She knocked playfully on the doorframe. Julian appeared in the threshold. He leaned against the jamb, completely unguarded and relaxed. He smiled—a genuine, soft smile I hadn't seen in years—reaching out to trace her jawline before stepping aside to let her back in.
For five years, Julian swore Seraphina was just a brilliant VP. A protégé. A purely professional necessity.
That champagne silk shattered the lie irreparably.
I expected to cry. I expected my chest to cave in and my heart to shatter. Instead, a sickly, absolute calm washed over my skin, freezing my veins. The fear evaporated instantly, leaving behind a cold, sharp, lethal clarity.
I opened my door. The hallway sat empty again. Down by the ice machine, a housekeeper had temporarily abandoned her supply cart.
I walked over with deliberate steps and grabbed the metal handle. I dragged it heavily down the corridor. The wheels squealed against the carpet, a harsh, grating sound slicing through the quiet hotel. I parked the massive cart directly in front of 412, blocking half of his doorway.
I pressed his doorbell. I held my finger firmly on the button for three agonizing seconds.
"I said we don't need service!" Julian yelled from inside. He yanked the door open violently, his brow deeply furrowed in anger. His eyes hit the cart, then traveled slowly up to my face. The annoyance vanished instantly. All the color drained rapidly from his cheeks until he looked like a corpse.
"Clara?" he whispered, his voice trembling.
"Hello, Julian."
"What are you doing here?"
"You left your Slack on," I said, my tone eerily pleasant. "It said Paris. I thought I'd bring your anniversary gift in person." I pulled the silver envelope from my jacket pocket.
"Clara, listen to me," he started, his hands coming up in a desperate, placating gesture.
"I don't want to listen." I flicked my wrist lazily. The card dropped flawlessly into the cart's plastic trash bin. It landed on a pile of discarded coffee pods. "Happy anniversary."
Julian stared at the trash bin in utter disbelief, then back at me. "How did you even find this room?"
"Does it matter?"
"Julian? Who is at the door?"
I shifted my stance slightly, looking past him into the lavish suite. Seraphina sat on the velvet sofa near the window. The robe slumped seductively off her left shoulder. She froze completely when she saw me. Her eyes darted wildly around the room. She scrambled backward in panic, snatching a heavy wool coat off the armrest and holding it tight against her exposed chest.
"Mrs. Vance," Seraphina stammered, her smugness entirely gone. "This isn't... we were just going over the European expansion plans."
I let out a short, hollow laugh that echoed in the corridor. "In sleepwear? Your dedication to the firm is truly inspiring, Seraphina."
"Clara, stop," Julian demanded. His tone shifted drastically, trying to regain his usual CEO control. "Don't make a scene in the hallway."
"I'm not making a scene. I'm just dropping off the trash."
"Get inside," he ordered, reaching aggressively for my arm. "We are going to talk about this like adults."
I stepped back swiftly, avoiding his dirty grip. "Don't touch me."
"You flew across the world. You're clearly upset. Just come inside."
"And sit on the sofa with your mistress? I'll pass."
"She is not my mistress!"
"Right. She's your VP of late-night room service." I turned away from him with absolute finality.
"Where are you going?"
"Home."
"Clara, wait!"
I walked down the corridor. I didn't run. I kept my pace perfectly even, projecting total control. I hit the down button. The brass doors parted instantly. I stepped into the mirrored box.
Footsteps slapped hard and fast against the floor. Julian sprinted desperately out of his room. He hadn't even bothered to put on shoes. He lunged forward just as the doors began to slide shut, jamming his forearms brutally between the metal panels. The rubber sensors triggered, forcing the doors to bounce open.
He stood in the gap, his chest heaving wildly. His hair was a chaotic mess.
"You cannot just walk away," he said, his voice dropping to a harsh, controlling whisper.
"Watch me."
"I am your husband."
"Not anymore."
"We have a life together. You're going to throw five years away because of one misunderstanding?"
"A misunderstanding?" I tilted my head, my eyes burning into him. "Which part did I misunderstand, Julian? The secret flight? The fake New York meeting? Or the silk robe?"
"It meant nothing."
"If it meant nothing, then you lost me for nothing."
He pushed aggressively into the elevator, crowding my space. "I'm not letting you leave."
"Move, Julian."
"No. We are going back to the room, and I am going to explain everything."
"There is nothing left to explain."
"You put a tracker in my bag, didn't you?" he accused suddenly, his eyes narrowing in misplaced indignation. "That's how you found the hotel. You spied on me."
"You're lecturing me on trust right now? Really?"
"It's an invasion of privacy, Clara."
"You're sleeping with your assistant in Paris while telling me you're in New York. I think my AirTag is the least of our moral failings today."
"I made a mistake," he pleaded, his fake anger faltering immediately. "A stupid, meaningless mistake."
"Was it a mistake when you booked her ticket? Or when you lied to me on the phone three hours ago?"
"I didn't want to hurt you."
"Mission failed."
He reached desperately for my hand. I slapped it away viciously. "Do you want me to scream?" I asked softly, a dangerous edge to my tone. "I will scream right now. I will wake up this entire floor, and we can explain your 'misunderstanding' to the Parisian police."
He gritted his teeth. His jaw locked tight in fury and impotence.
"You wouldn't."
"Try me."
He stared at me, frantically searching my face for the submissive woman who used to pack his bags and leave sweet voicemails. She was completely gone.
"Clara, please. Give me ten minutes."
"I gave you five years."
He slowly, reluctantly stepped backward out of the elevator. He stood barefoot on the plush carpet, looking infinitely smaller than the powerful CEO he pretended to be.
"Enjoy the croissants, Julian," I said icily.
The brass doors slid shut cleanly, cutting off his pathetic face. The elevator descended swiftly, plunging my stomach into my shoes. I stared at my reflection in the cold metal walls. My hands finally began to shake. The sickly calm fractured slightly, letting the freezing reality bleed in: I was alone in Paris, my marriage utterly dead in a hotel hallway.
My phone buzzed sharply in my pocket. I pulled it out. The screen flashed an incoming call. It wasn't Julian. It was a number I hadn't seen in over three years. A number I swore I would never answer again. I stared at the name glowing on the screen, my thumb hovering over the green button, ready to embrace the chaos.
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