He walked straight toward me.
The entire ballroom fell silent.
I turned slowly.
Our eyes met—and Reeves smiled with genuine respect.
Then, in front of more than a hundred stunned guests, the CEO bowed slightly and said clearly:
“Good evening, Madam Chairwoman. We’re glad to finally have you back.”
The sound of a glass shattering on the floor was the only thing anyone heard after that.
Madison froze.
Grant went pale.
Whispers spread like wildfire:
“Chairwoman?”
“What did he just say?”
“Who is she?”
Grant stepped forward, incredulous.
“There must be a mistake… she’s my wife… I mean—she’s a housewife…”
Reeves looked at him with a mix of surprise and disapproval.
“A housewife?” he repeated. “Mr. Matthews, allow me to formally introduce you to the majority owner and Executive Chairwoman of Vanguard Global Holdings.”
The silence turned heavy.
Another glass slipped from someone’s hand.
Phones came out quietly.
I set the tray down, removed the headband and apron calmly. Underneath, I wore a sleek black gown I’d hidden beneath the uniform.
The transformation was instant.
I walked toward Grant.
His face was unraveling.
“Isabella… I… I didn’t know…”
“I know,” I said, steady. “That’s why I endured so much.”
Then I looked at Madison.
“That necklace belongs to my family. I’d appreciate it if you returned it.”
Her hands shook as she unclasped it and placed it in my palm.
Grant was sweating.
“Baby… we can talk about this at home…”
I stared straight into him.
“No. This ends here.”
I held the emerald necklace, and my voice stayed quiet—but every word landed like steel.
“I gave you love when you had nothing. I believed in you when no one else did. But you confused growth with superiority… and you confused patience with weakness.”
The executives watched in absolute silence.
Reeves stepped in.
“Mr. Matthews, your position now falls directly under decisions of the board chaired by Mrs. Carter.”
Grant swallowed hard.
“Isabella… please…”
I cut him off.
“Don’t worry. I’m not firing you.”
Relief flashed across his face—for exactly one second.
“Because you’re resigning. Right now.”
A ripple moved through the room.
“I want you to have exactly what you deserve,” I continued. “To start from zero—without anyone clearing the road for you.”
Hotel security approached discreetly.
Madison tried to speak.
“I didn’t know that—”
I looked at her.
“You knew he was married.”
She said nothing after that.
Reeves offered his arm.