The conference-room door opened an inch against its hydraulic hinge and then stopped. I heard Daniel’s voice, low and easy in the tone he used when he believed he was in control of a room.

“She has no idea what’s really going on.”

A woman answered something too soft for me to catch.

Then I heard a short laugh.

Not his.

I stepped forward, laid the phone on the receptionist’s desk, and smiled at the woman sitting behind it.

“He forgot this,” I said.

She glanced at the door, then back at me, her expression tightening in that quick, guilty way people get when they know something without meaning to know it.

“I’ll make sure he gets it,” she said.

“Thank you.”

I turned and walked back down the hallway, past the framed renderings of projects Daniel’s firm had built, past the polished elevator doors, past my own reflection in the mirrored panel by the exit.

I did not cry in the elevator.

I did not cry in the lobby.

I did not cry in the parking garage, either, though I sat in my car for three full minutes with both hands on the steering wheel and the cold leather seam pressing into my palms hard enough to leave a mark.

I have never been a woman who cries easily.