
The Mute Button That Stayed On Her Wedding Ring Live On Camera
Chapter 2
"Did she already know?"
That was the top comment. It sat pinned at the peak of the feed with two hundred thousand likes.
I sat at my kitchen island, watching the screen. By 6:00 AM, the four-second clip of my hands had crossed forty-two million views. Some user had slowed the footage down, doing a frame-by-frame breakdown of my movements. The closing of the velvet box. The slide across the table. My unblinking stare into the camera.
They analyzed the exact millimeter my jaw shifted. They debated the absolute lack of tears in my eyes.
My phone vibrated against the quartz counter. Another interview request from a morning talk show. I swiped it away, sending it to join the three hundred others in my trash bin. I hadn't slept. I hadn't cried. I spent the last eight hours pulling apart the foundation of my marriage.
"It was a joke taken out of context," Dorian's official PR account had posted at 3:00 AM. "Malicious editing of a private marital moment."
Nobody bought it.
By 5:00 AM, the internet found her. Sienna Pratt. Dorian's lead sponsorship liaison. Someone matched the background of a selfie on her private account to the VIP lounge at our last brand gala. The same gala where Dorian told me he needed to take a crucial call in the green room.
I dragged my cursor across my laptop screen and double-clicked a hidden folder. A prompt demanded a twelve-character password. I typed it in.
Thumbnails populated the screen. Three years of original product sketches. Three years of patent application receipts. I opened the master file, verifying every single date stamp. My name. My signature.
A notification popped up in the corner of my screen. A direct message on a private industry forum.
*Adrian Cole.*
The head of our largest manufacturing plant. He controlled the entire supply chain for the Forever One collection. Without his factories, Vale & Reyes had nothing to sell.
*We need to meet,* the message read.
I didn't reply. I closed the laptop and grabbed my keys.
***
"You need to wear the white silk blouse," Celeste said.
She paced the length of the glass conference table, her steps echoing against the polished concrete floor.
I sat at the far end of the boardroom. I didn't reach for the coffee in front of me.
Dorian sat opposite me. His eyes were bloodshot, his tie loosened. "Margot, listen to her. We go live at nine. We hold hands, we laugh it off. We say the placeholder comment was an inside joke about a temporary venue booking."
"A venue booking," I repeated.
"Yes," Dorian insisted. He leaned forward, pressing his palms flat against the glass. "It works. It's plausible. We tell them I was talking to a real estate agent."
"Sienna Pratt's social media accounts went private an hour ago," I said. "Her name is currently trending above our brand name. A venue booking doesn't explain why thousands of people are currently tagging your sponsorship liaison in snake emojis."
Dorian flinched. His jaw tightened. "That's just internet noise. They're guessing."
"They aren't guessing," Celeste interrupted, stopping her pacing. She pointed a manicured finger at me. "Which is why we need you on camera. Now. We need the unified front."
"No."
"Margot, this isn't a negotiation," Celeste snapped. "Our stock opens in an hour. If we don't have a video of you two smiling, we lose millions."
"You already lost millions," I said.
"Because of you!" Dorian shouted. He slammed his hand on the table, rattling the coffee cups. "You could have laughed it off! You could have covered the mic! Instead, you packed up a ring on live television and walked out!"
"I sold the product," I replied, keeping my voice entirely level. "I told them the bond couldn't be broken. You were the one who broke it."
"I was placating an investor's daughter!"
"You were sleeping with your liaison," I corrected.
Silence hit the room. Celeste stared at Dorian, her mouth parting slightly. Dorian sank back into his chair. He didn't deny it.
"We can double your equity," Celeste offered, her tone dropping an octave. She moved closer to my side of the table. "Just ten seconds on camera. You smile, he kisses your cheek. That's it. We restructure the holding company today."
"I don't need his equity."
"Margot, whatever personal issues you two have, handle them later," Celeste pleaded. "Right now, Vale & Reyes needs to survive. Put on the blouse."
"You're under contract," Dorian added, his tone shifting from desperation to malice. "You walk out of this room, you void the morality clause. I'll sue you for breach."
I stood up. I picked up my leather portfolio from the empty chair beside me.
"Where are you going?" Dorian demanded.
"Out," I said.
"You think you can just burn this to the ground?" Dorian asked, stepping into my path before I reached the door. "I built this company."
"You built the marketing," I corrected. "I built the product."
"And nobody cares about the product without my face selling it!" he shot back. "You're a designer, Margot. You sit in a back room and draw. I'm the one out there shaking hands, securing the deals. You need me."
"I needed a husband," I said. "I got a placeholder."
He stopped. The word hit him exactly how I intended.
"I made one mistake," he muttered.
"You made a mistake by leaving the microphone on," I said. "The affair was a choice."
"You walk out that door, and I'll issue a solo statement," Dorian threatened, his voice rising again. "I'll say you're unstable. I'll say the pressure of the broadcast got to you."
I unzipped the portfolio. I pulled out a single sheet of paper. I slid it across the glass table. It stopped precisely in front of Celeste.
"A solo statement won't save you," I said.
Celeste looked down. The top of the page read *Patent Ownership* in bold black ink.
"What is this?" Celeste asked. Her voice wavered.
"Read it," I offered.
She didn't pick it up. She slammed her hand down over the paper, pinning it to the glass as if it might catch fire. Her eyes darted from the document to my face.
Dorian stood up. "What did you give her?"
"The truth," I said.
"Margot, stop playing games. What is on that paper?" Dorian asked, rounding the table.
I looked at Celeste. Her knuckles turned white against the page. She refused to lift her hand.
"An on-camera reconciliation is useless," I told her, ignoring Dorian completely. "Because by noon, there won't be a brand left for him to represent."
I turned and walked toward the door.
"Margot!" Dorian yelled.
I didn't look back. I pulled the handle and walked out into the hallway, leaving Celeste paralyzed with her hand glued to the single piece of paper.
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