After my husband was appointed Director, he demanded a divorce, called me “unworthy of his new rank,” and

After my husband was appointed Director, he demanded a divorce, called me “unworthy of his new rank,” and

The crystal chandelier suspended above the table at L’Hermitage cast sharp, diamond-cut flashes of light onto Marc Thorne’s brand-new Rolex. Throughout the entire first course—a meticulously plated wagyu carpaccio he barely touched—he kept adjusting his cufflink. The intention was unmistakable: to allow the waiter, the sommelier, and perhaps even the diners at the neighboring table to catch the way the light slid and shimmered across the gold case of his watch.

At last, Marc folded his hands over the pristine linen tablecloth, feigning courteous attention toward the man across from him—a soft-spoken figure discussing emerging markets and long-term projections. In truth, Marc listened only in fragments. His gaze drifted again and again toward the chandelier’s reflections, subconsciously calculating angles, glints, impact. Every detail of the evening, to him, was a carefully staged performance.

The waiter returned, precise and silent, to clear the nearly untouched plate. As Marc extended his arm, he tilted his wrist just enough—an apparently casual gesture, yet perfectly rehearsed. The sommelier, a seasoned professional, registered the watch with a fleeting glance before recommending a rare Burgundy, described in reverent, carefully chosen words. Marc nodded, satisfied.

And yet, beneath that polished confidence, a quiet tension lingered. Luxury had always been his language—his armor, his way of claiming space without asking permission. Tonight, however, something resisted him. Perhaps it was the pause that stretched too long between sentences. Perhaps it was the fact that his counterpart smiled without ever truly being impressed.

When the main course arrived, trailing deep, comforting aromas, Marc straightened in his chair. It occurred to him, suddenly, that the real negotiation was not being fought in gold and crystal, but in what remained unsaid—once the lights lost their brilliance and became ordinary.

And for the first time that evening, he let his wrist remain still.