By midnight, I was sitting across from Elias in his office downtown. Not the public conference room with the tasteful art and expensive coffee service. The back room. The one where strategy happened. Files lined the walls. A floor lamp cast a pool of yellow over the conference table. There was no sympathy in the room, which was exactly what I needed. Sympathy would have invited collapse. Strategy required oxygen.

I told him everything.

Lauren’s message.

The condo.

The conversation in the pantry.

My mother’s promise to lie.

The planned postnup.

Trent’s debt.

Jasmine’s desperation.

Elias listened with his hands folded, saying very little except the occasional “Go on.”

When I finished, he leaned back, exhaled slowly, and said, “Well.”

That single word carried a surprising amount of admiration.

“I always knew Julian was greedy,” he said. “I didn’t know he was stupid.”

Elias had once mentored Julian, years before. He knew precisely how Julian liked to think of himself: sharpest man in the room, architect of outcomes, too sophisticated to get caught in ordinary traps. Men like that were dangerous, but they were also exquisitely vulnerable to flattery—especially their own.