I reached for his sleeve before he stepped up. Not to beg—just to see if he would still pretend in public.
He slapped my hand away.
Not hard enough to bruise. Hard enough to echo.
Then he leaned in, smiling for the room, and said, “Don’t embarrass me—you’re just a baby carrier.”
The conversations around us died instantly. Forks froze midair. Heads turned. One hundred twenty guests watched my husband reduce me to a body in a gown.
I smiled.
Then I stood, walked to the stage before he could stop me, took the microphone from his hand, and faced every investor, board member, reporter, and donor in the room.
“Actually,” I said, steady as glass, “since Grant wants honesty tonight, let’s tell the whole truth about what I’ve been carrying for him.”
You could feel the tension tighten around me.
Grant reached for the microphone, but I stepped back before he could grab it. Pregnancy had slowed me, not dulled me. “Sit down,” I told him, calm and smiling. “You’ve had two years to speak. I only need five minutes.”
A nervous laugh flickered at the back of the room and died just as quickly.
“My name is Amelia Brooks Holloway,” I said, “and the company you’re celebrating tonight did not save itself. Holloway Development was kept alive with money taken from Brooks Industrial, the company my father built and left to me.”
Grant exhaled sharply. “Amelia, enough.”
“No,” I said. “Not even close.”
I turned toward the head table where the board sat frozen beside untouched coffee cups. “Three months ago, I discovered that my husband forged my signature on loan documents and used my family’s assets as collateral without my consent. I also discovered that he has been using company funds to pay for a downtown condo, travel, meals, and gifts for his mistress, Vanessa Cole.”