Home / Urban / The Consortium Behind Your Collapse / Chapter 2: The Slap Heard Round the Room
Chapter 2: The Slap Heard Round the Room
Author: Winter
last update2025-12-26 06:14:02

The divorce papers felt heavier than they should have.

Julian stared down at the folder Raymond had shoved into his hands. His name was already typed in. Eleanor's signature line waited blank and accusatory. The settlement terms were buried somewhere in the middle, but Julian already knew what they would say.

"Open it." Raymond's voice cut through the suffocating silence of the boardroom. "I want you to see exactly how generous we're being by not throwing you in a cell."

Julian's fingers moved to the folder's edge, but something made him stop. Maybe it was the way every shareholder leaned forward like vultures waiting for roadkill. Or maybe it was Victoria's phone aimed at him like a weapon, her smile too wide and cruel. 

"What's wrong, Julian?" Raymond circled around the conference table slowly."Having second thoughts or worried about what happens when the world finds out you're a thief?"

"I'm not a thief." Julian kept his voice level despite the rage building in his chest. "Those documents are fabricated. Anyone with basic accounting knowledge could see—"

"Anyone with basic accounting knowledge can see your signature on every fraudulent contract." Raymond stopped three feet away, and Julian could smell his cologne. "Your company letterhead. Your bank accounts receive payments from shell corporations. The evidence is bulletproof."

"Then take it to the police." Julian met Raymond's glare without flinching. "If you're so certain, let the authorities investigate”.

The temperature in the room dropped ten degrees.

Raymond's face flushed red, a vein throbbing at his temple. Around the table, shareholders exchanged uncomfortable glances. Victor Adam's expression remained gentle, but his fingers drummed once against the table. 

"You think you're clever?" Raymond's voice climbed toward a shout. "You think you can talk your way out of this like you've talked your way through everything else? Convincing my sister to marry you? Leeching off this family for three years? Living in our house, driving our cars, spending our money while pretending to be some kind of respectable architect?"

"Raymond." Eleanor's voice was quiet . "That's enough."

"Enough?" Raymond whirled on his sister. "He stole two million dollars from this family, Eleanor. Two million! And you want to protect him?"

"I want to handle this with dignity." Eleanor stood up."We can resolve this without theatrics."

"Theatrics?" Raymond laughed."This bastard has been stealing from us, and you call my reaction theatrics?"

"Your brother is right, Eleanor." Victor Adam's voice carried the weight of absolute authority. "This man has disgraced our family. He deserves everything Raymond wants to do to him and more."

"So sign the papers." Raymond moved closer to Julian, close enough that Julian had to look up to maintain eye contact. "Sign them and disappear. It's a better deal than you deserve."

Julian's hands tightened on the folder. 

"Fine." Julian opened the folder calmly. "I'll sign it."

Raymond's smile could have cut glass. "Smart choice."

Julian scanned the first page of the divorce agreement. Standard dissolution of marriage language, citing irreconcilable differences. His eyes moved to the second page, the settlement terms. He kept his expression neutral even as he read the requirements: admission of guilt to financial impropriety, forfeiture of all marital assets, a non-disclosure agreement preventing him from speaking publicly about the Adam family.

"You'll need a pen." One of the shareholders, a woman in her fifties slid a fountain pen across the table.

Julian reached for it.

That's when Raymond struck, punching Julian hard on his face.

Pain exploded across Julian's cheek. The force spun his head to the side and sent him staggering backward. His hip hit the edge of the small chair he'd been sitting in earlier, and he barely caught himself before falling.

The boardroom erupted in gasps. Julian's hand went to his face automatically. When he pulled it away, his fingers came back red. Blood dripped from his split lip, warm and copper-tasting in his mouth.

"You think you can steal from the Adams and get away with it?" Raymond's face was twisted with rage. "You think you can sit there with your fake dignity and lecture me about investigations?"

"Raymond, stop!" Eleanor's voice cracked through the chaos, but she didn't move from her position at the table. 

Julian straightened slowly, his equilibrium returning. 

"This is assault." Julian's voice came out steady despite the blood on his chin. "In front of a dozen witnesses."

Raymond laughed, wild and vicious. "Witnesses who'll testify you attacked me first. Self-defense, Julian. Try proving otherwise when you're a known criminal and I'm Raymond Adam."

The shareholders who'd gasped were already rearranging their expressions. 

"That's enough, Raymond." Victor Adam finally stood up. "We don't need violence, we have the law on our side."

"The law?" Raymond wheeled on his father. "He deserves worse than a slap! He deserves—"

"He deserves to sign those papers and leave our lives." Victor's tone allowed no argument. "Anything else creates complications we don't need."

Raymond's chest heaved, his fists clenched at his sides. He swallowed his rage and stepped back, though his eyes promised future violence.

"You're right." Raymond's smile returned, colder than before. He reached into his jacket and pulled out his phone. "But I think Julian needs proper motivation to cooperate."

He dialed a number. Two rings, then a voice answered.

"Send them in," Raymond said.

The boardroom doors opened. Two security guards entered. They positioned themselves on either side of the doorway, blocking the only exit.

Julian's pulse kicked up despite his best efforts to stay calm. 

"Just insurance." Raymond tucked his phone away. "In case you get stupid ideas about leaving before you sign."

Victoria was still recording, her phone aimed at Julian like a gun. 

“Eleanor.”

Julian turned to his wife one last time. The movement felt heavier than it should have, as though the weight of the room itself pressed against his shoulders. His eyes searched her face, desperate for a crack in the cold mask she wore.

“You know this is wrong,” he said quietly. There was no anger in his tone now—only a weary certainty. “Are you really going to let them do this?”

For a moment, something flickered across Eleanor’s face. Doubt. Pain. Fear.

Then it vanished.

“I don’t know what I know anymore, Julian.” Her voice came out sharp, deliberately distant, as if cruelty were the only way she could keep herself standing. “The evidence is right there.” She gestured vaguely toward the table, the files, the accusations stacked neatly against him. “How am I supposed to ignore that?”

Julian didn’t answer.

Instead, he reached down and picked up the fountain pen from the floor where it had fallen earlier.

As he clicked the pen open, a slow drop of blood slid from his knuckles and splashed on the pristine white paper below. Red bloomed against the page, bleeding into the dark ink.

Before he could move further, a sudden force slammed into him.

Raymond surged forward and seized Julian by the collar, jerking him across the table. Fabric tightened around Julian’s throat, cutting into his skin, stealing his breath and the world narrowed to pressure and heat.

Raymond’s face hovered inches away, twisted with fury, his breath hot and sour against Julian’s cheek. “Sign the divorce papers,” he hissed, spittle flying, “or I’ll have you arrested for fraud right now.”

His grip tightened even more, fingers digging in.

Around them, the security guards shifted subtly, spreading out, ready to step in.

Julian didn’t struggle.

He slowly lifted his gaze to meet Raymond’s, unblinking.

Then he smiled.

“I’ll sign,” Julian said calmly.

Raymond froze for half a second, clearly not expecting that.

Then he released Julian with a violent shove. Julian stumbled back, barely catching himself as the folder of divorce papers slid off the table and burst open, pages fluttering down and scattering across the floor like discarded trash.

Raymond bent down, scooped up the papers, and flung them at Julian’s feet.

“Sign them now,” he snapped, “or you’ll rot in prison.”

Julian looked down at the papers.

Then he lifted his head and slowly scanned the boardroom—the smug faces, the guarded ones, and the triumphant ones. 

They had no idea what was coming.

But they would.

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