
Beg On Your Knees: Erasing My CEO Husband
Chapter 3
I sank into the velvet sofa in the grand lobby, staring blankly at the glass coffee table. Footsteps approached rapidly. Julian dropped heavily into the armchair across from me. He had thrown on a crisp dress shirt and slacks, though he hadn't bothered with a tie. His hair was still slightly damp from a rushed splash of water.
He reached purposefully into his jacket pocket, pulling out a heavy, matte-black credit card. He slid it forcefully across the glass surface. It stopped mere inches from my fingers.
"Take this," Julian commanded softly, attempting to buy back control.
I didn't touch it. "What is that?"
"My private account card. There's no limit." He leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees. "Go to the boutiques on Avenue Montaigne. Buy the Cartier watch you liked last year. Book a spa weekend in Provence. Take a few days to cool off."
A dry, bitter laugh escaped my throat. "You're trying to buy my forgiveness?"
"I'm trying to be reasonable," he argued smoothly. "You flew all the way here. You're emotional. I get it."
"Emotional." I repeated the word slowly, tasting exactly how bitter it felt on my tongue.
"The PR pressure from this merger has been suffocating, Clara. You know how much is riding on this deal."
"So you slept with your VP."
"It was just stress relief," he insisted, keeping his voice carefully low to avoid drawing stares from the concierge desk. "A release valve. Nothing more."
I stared at his perfectly chiseled face. For five minutes in that elevator, a tiny, pathetic part of my brain had secretly hoped he would fall to his knees. I had wanted real tears. I had wanted a desperate, soul-baring apology. I had expected him to beg. Instead, he offered me a metal credit card and a flimsy corporate excuse.
"Stress relief," I murmured softly. "Like a gym session. Or a stiff drink."
"Exactly," Julian agreed far too quickly, mistaking my flat, dead tone for understanding. "It has absolutely nothing to do with my love for you. You are my wife. She is just an employee."
"An employee who wears silk in your hotel room at ten in the morning."
"We were working."
"Do you hear yourself right now?"
"I am telling you the truth," he shot back, his tone hardening with arrogant frustration. "Men in my position face unimaginable stress. Sometimes we slip up. It doesn't change what we built."
I flicked the edge of the black card contemptuously. It spun wildly across the table and fell onto the rug at his feet. "Keep it," I told him icily. "You'll need it to pay for her champagne."
Julian's jaw tightened visibly. The polished CEO mask cracked, revealing the ugly, arrogant man underneath.
"You are acting completely irrational," he hissed angrily. "I am trying to fix this."
"You can't fix a shattered glass by taping a hundred-dollar bill to it, Julian."
He stood up aggressively, towering over me to use his physical presence. He adjusted his cuffs, his fake patience entirely spent. "Fine. If you want to throw a tantrum, do it at home. Not in my hotel." He turned his head and snapped his fingers sharply at a nearby security guard.
The burly man in a dark suit marched over immediately.
"My wife is leaving," Julian told the guard authoritatively. "Escort her to a car. Make sure the driver takes her straight to Charles de Gaulle."
The guard nodded respectfully. "Right away, Mr. Vance."
"You're deporting me now?" I challenged, rising gracefully to my feet.
"I am managing a crisis," Julian corrected coldly. "Go back to Los Angeles. We will discuss this when I return on Friday. When you are calm."
I slung my purse confidently over my shoulder. Before I turned away, a flicker of movement caught my eye. I tilted my chin up toward the sweeping marble staircase.
Seraphina stood on the second-floor landing. She had changed out of the scandalous silk robe and into a sharp, tailored dress. She leaned casually over the brass railing, looking directly down at me like a queen surveying a peasant. Her lips curved into a slow, viciously victorious smile. She didn't look like a mistake. She looked like a woman who had just won the lottery and wanted me to know it.
Julian followed my gaze. He noticed Seraphina, and a sudden flash of panic crossed his features. "Clara, let's just get you to the airport," he urged, stepping aggressively into my personal space. He reached out, aiming to grab my elbow and force me out.
I twisted my torso swiftly, dodging his hand entirely. "Do not touch me," I warned, my voice practically vibrating with danger.
"Stop making a scene," he muttered through gritted teeth.
"I haven't even raised my voice." I locked eyes with him one last time, memorizing the face of the stranger I married. "Goodbye, Julian."
I didn't wait for the security guard to guide me. I walked straight toward the revolving glass doors with my head held high. The Parisian sunlight hit my face, blindingly bright after the dim, suffocating lobby. A black taxi idled perfectly at the curb. I opened the rear door and slid onto the cool leather seat.
"Charles de Gaulle," I instructed the driver firmly.
"Oui, Madame."
The car pulled away from the George V. I didn't look back to see if Julian had followed me outside. I knew he hadn't. He was already climbing those marble stairs to his prize.
The drive to the airport took nearly an hour, but the silence inside the cab felt far heavier than the traffic. I stared down at my left hand. The three-carat diamond caught the sunlight brilliantly, flashing radiant rainbows across the dark leather interior. Five years ago, Julian had slipped it onto my finger in front of our families, promising a lifetime of unbreakable loyalty.
My right hand reached over decisively. I pinched the platinum band between my thumb and index finger. It felt too tight. My knuckles had swollen slightly from the long flight and the severe lack of sleep. I pulled hard. The metal scraped harshly over my skin, leaving an angry red mark in its wake.
The ring popped off. My ring finger looked remarkably naked. A pale indentation circled the base, a haunting ghost of the marriage I was permanently leaving behind. I unzipped the hidden compartment inside my purse and dropped the diamond in. The zipper zipped shut with a sharp, incredibly final sound.
Hours later, the deep hum of the jet engines vibrated through the floor of the first-class cabin. I sat in a wide, private pod, a glass of untouched sparkling water resting on the tray table. The flight attendant had considerately dimmed the cabin lights, leaving only the cool blue ambient glow along the ceiling.
I unlocked my phone. The screen illuminated my exhausted but resolute face. I opened my email app and tapped the drafts folder. At the very top sat a loaded message I had typed out while sitting in the airport lounge.
*To: David.Rosen@rosenlaw.com* *Subject: Divorce Agreement - Clara Whitmore*
David was universally known as the best, most vicious family lawyer in Los Angeles. He was ruthless, obscenely expensive, and didn't care a single bit about Julian Vance's intimidating corporate empire.
I opened the draft. The text was brutal and brief. No emotional rambling. Just a direct, icy request to draft papers citing infidelity, demanding a complete and total severance of assets. I had explicitly attached the screenshot of his Paris IP address, the Uber receipt, and the damning photo I snapped of Seraphina standing smugly on the staircase.
My thumb hovered over the blue arrow at the top right of the screen. Pressing that button meant total war. Julian would never let his immaculate public image tarnish without a bloody fight. He would brutally use his PR team, his army of lawyers, and his bottomless bank accounts to try and crush me into dust.
Did I have the strength for this?
I thought about the insulting black credit card sliding across the glass table. I thought about the triumphant smirk on Seraphina's face.
My thumb lowered without hesitation toward the glass. *Send.* ---
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