He Rejected Future Husband. Two Days Later, Lunch Went Silent-nhu9999 - Chainityai

He Rejected Future Husband. Two Days Later, Lunch Went Silent-nhu9999

The first time Adrian Vale corrected me in public, he did it softly.

That was the part people always missed about cruelty.

It does not always arrive as shouting.

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Sometimes it arrives with a smile, a low voice, and a hand resting casually around a wineglass while everyone at the table decides whether they are going to pretend they did not hear it.

We were sitting in one of those restaurants where the tablecloths were pressed so flat they looked painted on.

The room smelled faintly of lemon oil, butter, perfume, and expensive flowers that had been cut too early and arranged to look effortless.

A fork scraped somewhere behind me.

Champagne glasses rang softly at a nearby table.

The linen napkin under my fingers felt cool and stiff, and I remember thinking that it was absurd how clearly I could feel cloth at the exact moment my future started breaking in half.

I had only said one sentence.

“My future husband can’t stand olives,” I told the waiter.

That was it.

I had smiled when I said it.

I had moved the small dish away from Adrian’s plate because I knew he hated olives, because I knew he would leave them untouched and then make a little joke later about the restaurant pretending bitterness was cuisine.

I knew his coffee order.

I knew the way he liked his shirts packed when he traveled.

I knew which donors bored him, which editors scared him, which investors he could charm and which ones saw through him in under five minutes.

I knew all of that because for almost two years, I had made loving him look like competence.

Adrian’s hand stopped on his wineglass.

His face turned toward me slowly.

He had a handsome face, and he knew exactly how to arrange it.

Warm for donors.

Focused for investors.

Boyish for older women who liked to feel important.

Soft for cameras.

That afternoon, he chose polished regret.

“Don’t call me your future husband,” he said.

The words were not loud.

They did not need to be.

Across from me, his sister Camille gave a small smile that tried to look accidental and failed.

His mother, Vivienne, looked down at my engagement ring as if the diamond had just told her something disappointing.

I blinked once.

“Excuse me?”

Adrian leaned back.

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