Pregnant Wife Played The Recording That Ended Her Husband's Empire-hamyt - Chainityai

Pregnant Wife Played The Recording That Ended Her Husband’s Empire-hamyt

The ballroom at the Metropolitan Museum glittered so hard it almost looked innocent.

Eight hundred donors sat under chandeliers, lifting champagne flutes toward Roman Foster as if wealth could polish cruelty into virtue.

He had just accepted the philanthropist of the year award, and every camera in the room was turned toward his silver hair, his practiced humility, and the smile he used when he wanted people to mistake arrogance for charm.

Image

At the head table, Halley Bowmont Foster sat with one hand over her five-month pregnant stomach.

Her soft blue gown made her look fragile, which was exactly how Roman liked her.

Amelia Vance, the Times columnist Roman privately called a nuisance, approached the table with a microphone and asked whether the Bowmont Trust would join Roman’s Westside Renewal Project.

Halley opened her mouth.

Roman laughed before she could speak.

“Amelia, please,” he said, turning toward the audience. “My wife runs that trust the way other women run book clubs.”

A few people chuckled because they were afraid not to.

Roman warmed to it.

“It keeps her occupied,” he said. “Her job is to look beautiful, carry my child, and stay out of real business.”

Halley’s fingers tightened around her water glass.

Two tables away, Vivian Drake smiled into her champagne.

Vivian was Roman’s assistant, his mistress, and the woman he believed would replace Halley once the gala crowned him chairman of the Metropolitan Legacy Fund.

Roman gestured toward Halley’s belly with lazy contempt.

“Know your place,” he said softly, but the microphone still caught it. “You breed, I do real business.”

The room fell into the kind of silence that makes powerful people look down at their plates.

Halley stood.

One tear moved down her cheek, and Roman saw it as proof that he had won.

“Pregnancy hormones,” he told the crowd. “She’ll be back after she powders her nose.”

Halley walked out through the center of the ballroom.

She did not stop for Roman, Vivian, Amelia, or the 800 people who had finally run out of polite laughter.

Outside, the October air struck her face cold and clean.

Read More