Assistant Slapped The CEO’s Wife At Dinner, Then Learned Who Funded Him-Aurelle - Chainityai

Assistant Slapped The CEO’s Wife At Dinner, Then Learned Who Funded Him-Aurelle

My husband’s assistant slapped me in front of eighteen executives and investors, then smiled as if she had just won.

She thought I was only the quiet wife at the table.

She thought my value began and ended with my seat beside Richard Vance.

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For ten years, that was exactly what he had allowed people to believe.

The private dining room was the kind of place where the lighting made everyone look wealthier than they were.

Crystal glasses caught the chandelier glow.

White linen stretched across the long table without a wrinkle.

The Cabernet smelled dark and expensive, and the sommelier poured it like he was handling something sacred.

Vance Logistics had rented the room for one reason.

Richard needed the investors comfortable before they signed off on the acquisition.

He had spent the last three weeks calling it the most important night of his career.

He had not called it the most important night of our marriage.

That was his mistake.

I sat two seats from the head of the table in a simple black silk dress and pearl earrings, listening as men who had ignored me for a decade discussed cash flow, market capture, warehouse capacity, and the future of a company I had quietly kept alive.

Richard was at the head of the table in a dark suit, charming everyone the way he always did when money was watching.

His smile was calm.

His voice was warm.

His hand moved across the air in practiced little gestures that made his lies feel organized.

Beside the doorway stood Victoria Sterling.

She was not supposed to be there.

She was Richard’s assistant, not a guest, not a shareholder, not a board member, and not part of the investment committee.

Still, she had arrived in a glittering silver gown that looked less like dinner attire and more like a declaration.

She laughed too loudly at Richard’s jokes.

She leaned too close when she refilled his folder.

She touched the back of his chair once, lightly, like a woman testing what she could claim in public.

I noticed.

So did half the table.

Richard pretended not to.

I had learned, over ten years, that pretending not to notice is one of the most expensive services a wife can provide.

People call it grace when it benefits them.

They call it dignity when it keeps their secrets comfortable.

The first warning came when Victoria corrected the seating cards.

One of the investors asked me a polite question about whether I had been involved in the acquisition structure.

Before I could answer, Victoria stepped in with a smile.

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