He wouldn't meet her eyes. His gaze was fixed on a point somewhere over her left shoulder, as if the panoramic view of Washington D.C. from the bay window was suddenly fascinating.
Genevieve Hayes said nothing. She simply watched him, her hands resting calmly in her lap.
Across from her, Carlee Roman tapped a perfectly manicured, blood-red nail against the table's surface. Tap. Tap. Tap. The sound was a sharp, impatient counterpoint to the city's distant hum.
"Honestly, Jaycob, what is there to discuss?" Carlee sighed, the massive diamond necklace around her throat glittering under the chandelier light. It looked cold. Heavy.
Jaycob cleared his throat, a dry, rasping sound. "It's a generous offer, Gen. More than fair."
Genevieve's eyes, the color of deep forest green, finally moved from Jaycob to the papers. She didn't read them. She knew what they said. They were an erasure. A legal document designed to nullify thirteen years of her life in exchange for a sum that wouldn't cover a down payment on a decent apartment in this city.
Her silence stretched, filling the room until the air grew thick and hard to breathe. Jaycob shifted in his expensive, custom-tailored suit. He ran a finger under his collar, a nervous tic she knew well.
Finally, she spoke. Her voice was low, devoid of the hysteria they had clearly been expecting.
"The suit you wore to your Yale Law School graduation, Jaycob. Who paid for it?"
The question landed in the sterile quiet of the room like a stone dropped into a frozen lake.
Jaycob's face, so carefully composed a moment ago, began to flood with color. A deep, ugly red crept up from his neck. His hand, which had been resting on the table, clenched into a tight fist.
Carlee let out a short, derisive laugh. She tossed her head back, making the diamonds dance.
"Oh, please. Are we really going to do this? The cheap sentimentality? Trying to guilt-trip him?"
She leaned forward, her voice dripping with condescension. "Jaycob is an associate at Cromwell & Sterling now. His future earning potential is something you can't even comprehend."
A faint, ironic smile touched Genevieve's lips. "His future?"
She let the question hang in the air for a beat.
"His future was paved with my past. With my savings. With thirteen years of my life."
Her gaze locked onto Jaycob, and this time, he couldn't look away. He was pinned by it.
"When your father passed away, who covered the funeral expenses because you were a broke student?"
A muscle in Jaycob's jaw twitched violently. His lips turned pale.
"When you were applying to law school, who stayed up for three nights straight editing your personal essays? Who paid the application fees and the full tuition so you wouldn't have to take on loans?"
Carlee's smug expression began to falter. This wasn't the tearful, pleading wife she had imagined.
"When you first made associate and couldn't afford a decent apartment near the firm, who gave you the keys to the house her parents left her, while she went and rented a small studio for herself?"
With each question, Jaycob seemed to shrink in his chair. His shoulders slumped. His head bowed lower and lower, until his forehead was nearly touching the glossy surface of the table that represented everything he had betrayed her for.
"Enough!" Carlee slammed her hand on the table, the sound making Jaycob flinch. Her diamond necklace swung wildly, catching the light like a cheap disco ball. "You just want more money! Is that it? Name your price!"
Genevieve finally turned her full attention to the other woman. Her green eyes were placid, almost unnervingly so. The calm at the center of a hurricane.
"Money?" she repeated softly. "No. I'm not here for a handout."
She rose from her chair. She wasn't tall, but her posture was impeccable, making her seem to command the space around her. She walked slowly around the table, her heels making no sound on the thick area rug.
Jaycob recoiled as she approached, a primal, guilty movement. He looked like a cornered animal.
Genevieve stopped beside him. She didn't look at him. Her fingers went to the simple, unadorned gold band on her ring finger. A family heirloom. She twisted it once, a small, private gesture.
"I'm here to collect a debt," she said, her voice still quiet but carrying an edge of steel. "A thirteen-year debt."
Then, her hand moved. She picked up the divorce agreement.
Without giving it a single glance, she held it up in front of them. And with a slow, deliberate motion, she tore the thick stack of papers directly in half.
The sound of ripping paper was violent in the silent room. It was the only sound.
Carlee let out a small, strangled gasp.
Jaycob's head snapped up, his brown eyes wide with disbelief. He stared at the two halves of the document in her hands as if she had just set the room on fire.
Genevieve let the pieces flutter from her fingers onto the table. They landed like discarded trash.
"This agreement," she said, her voice finally losing its softness, becoming as sharp and cold as broken glass, "is an insult to my investment."
She looked directly at Carlee, her gaze unwavering.
"You want him? Fine. You can have him."
She paused, letting the words sink in.
"But you will pay back what he owes me. Every last cent."
Carlee, for the first time, was speechless. The sheer, unexpected force of Genevieve's will had stunned her.
Genevieve turned and walked toward the door. She didn't hurry. There was no trace of a retreat in her stride. At the threshold, she stopped and looked back, her eyes landing on Carlee one last time.
"Miss Roman, your family is very powerful in this city. I know that. But let me offer you a piece of advice."
"Some things can't be bought with money or influence. Things like... a conscience."
She smiled that small, chilling smile again.
"Oh, I'm sorry. I forgot. He doesn't have one of those."
And then she was gone, leaving the wreckage of their expectations behind her in the silent, sunlit room.