BELOW MARKET VALUE

BELOW MARKET VALUE

last updateLast Updated : 2026-04-03
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Language: English
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Five years of loyalty. Five years of managing his crises, protecting his name, asking for nothing. On their anniversary, Dominic walked a red carpet with another woman and a son Mara never knew existed. By morning, there was a settlement document beside her plate. They assumed she would sign quietly. They had never been paying attention. She was never the placeholder. She was the asset.

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Chapter 1

The Dinner She Cooked for a Ghost

The short ribs go into the marinade at two in the afternoon.

I do it the way Margaret showed me, back when she still looked at me like I might be worth the effort of teaching: red wine, fresh thyme, a bay leaf, and enough patience to let the meat forget it was ever anything but tender. I learned it in this kitchen, in this apartment, with her standing at my shoulder correcting the angle of my knife. That was year one. When things were still being built.

I am not a sentimental woman. But I believe in anniversaries the way I believe in contracts — they mean something because both parties agreed they would. Five years is not nothing. Five years is the Hargrove crisis and the miscarriage we never named and the three months he worked in Singapore and I repainted the study just to have something to do with my hands. Five years is a number that should be honored.

So I press the tablecloth flat with my palms. I set out the good china, the set we registered for and never use because Dominic says it feels like a museum. I polish two glasses until they hold the light properly. I center the candles. I do all of it without rushing, because rushing would mean I am nervous, and I am not nervous.

I am carrying something, though. Have been for three weeks.

The folder is in my coat pocket, in the entryway. I have not moved it since I came home from Dr. Osei’s office, as if keeping it there, close to the door, close to the outside world, means it hasn’t fully entered my life yet. Early-stage. Caught in time. Treatable, he said, with a particular gentleness that told me he understood those words don’t land softly no matter how he arranges them.

I have not told anyone.

Tonight I was going to tell Dominic.

Not dramatically. I rehearsed it in the car, the way I rehearse anything I need to say cleanly — just the facts first, then the treatment plan, then my hand in his, then whatever came after. I am not afraid of his reaction. I have never needed him to be strong for me. I only needed him to be present.

I check my phone at six. Nothing.

At seven I light the candles and open a glass of water, because I am not going to start the Porto wine alone.

At eight I move the short ribs to low heat to hold.

At nine I sit down at the table and look at the two place settings and think about the version of this evening I planned, how I had practiced the exact sentence — I need to tell you something, and I need you to just listen first — and how certain I was, three weeks ago, that I had earned the right to say it.

My phone stays dark.

At ten-thirty I blow out the candles. The wax has pooled and hardened into shapes that mean nothing.

At eleven I check the marinade out of habit, not hunger.

At midnight, three words arrive.

*Held up. Sorry.*

I read them twice. Then I set the phone on the counter and stand very still for a moment, the way you stand when you are deciding whether what you just felt was actually what you felt.

Then the phone buzzes again. A news alert this time, which I open without thinking, because my hands are already moving.

The headline is not long. It doesn’t need to be.

*Dominic Sloane and childhood sweetheart Celeste Vaughn make it official — spotted leaving Aurelius with her son, who sources confirm is his.*

The photo beneath it is taken by someone who knew what they were doing. Good light, sharp focus. Dominic is in the charcoal suit I helped him select for the Meridian dinner last spring. His hand is at the small of a woman’s back — easy, familiar, the posture of a man who has stood exactly like this many times before. A boy is asleep against his shoulder, dark-haired, small, no older than four. Dominic is smiling.

I have not seen that smile in a long time. The loose one, the unguarded one, the one that means he has nothing to manage.

I look at the photo for exactly as long as it takes to understand it completely.

Then I set the phone face-down on the table.

I do not cry. That is not a point of pride — it is simply that the feeling inside me right now is not the kind that moves toward tears. It is quieter than that. More fundamental. The feeling of a floor dropping away and discovering that you have been standing on it your whole life without knowing.

I pick up the bottle of Porto.

We bought it on the third day of our honeymoon, from a man at a roadside market who didn’t speak English and didn’t need to. Dominic carried it in his backpack for the rest of the trip, careful with it, and when we got home he wrote the date on the label in marker and said *only on a milestone.* I put it in the back of the wine rack and left it there for five years.

I carry it to the kitchen. I open it. I pour it down the sink and watch it go.

Then I go back to the table and sit down.

I place one hand flat against my sternum, the way I do when I am deciding something. The dinner is cooling in front of me, the short ribs and the pressed tablecloth and the polished glasses catching nothing now because the candles are out. The apartment is very quiet.

My coat is still in the entryway. The folder still in the pocket.

I sit there in the dark with my hand on my chest, perfectly still, and I begin to decide.

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