The atmosphere in the Von Merri's grand lobby was thick with a lust for vengeance. Jett and the Barlowes, their public face of celebration now a mask for private fury, had decided on a new strategy. Connor wasn't just a cheating husband anymore. He was a violent criminal.
Gregory Tanner, the Uber manager, scurried into the hotel, his face pale but determined. Jett had summoned him to play his part in the public execution. This was his chance to solidify his place in Maddox's inner circle.
Connor was "escorted" into the lobby by hotel security. He offered no resistance, his calm demeanor an unnerving contrast to the baying mob that awaited him.
The wedding guests formed a circle, a makeshift tribunal.
Gregory Tanner stepped into the center, puffing out his chest. He pointed a trembling finger at Connor.
"Connor Wise!" he announced, his voice ringing with self-importance. "On behalf of Uber Technologies, for your violent and unprovoked assault, I am officially terminating your contract! You are fired!"
He let the words hang in the air, soaking in the murmurs of approval from the crowd. "Furthermore," he added, "your file will be flagged. You will never work for a ride-sharing service in this country again!"
A wave of satisfaction washed over the guests. Jett and Genevieve stood at the front, their faces triumphant.
Connor's expression didn't change. He didn't even look at Gregory.
Instead, he took out his personal phone. The sleek, unfamiliar device looked alien in his hands. He dialed a number and put it on speaker.
A crisp, deferential voice answered immediately. "Sir. How may I assist?"
The title, "Sir," caused a few brows to furrow, but most dismissed it as part of the act.
Connor's voice was devoid of emotion. "Finchley, I want you to terminate all global corporate partnership agreements between the Hoffman Group and Uber. Effective immediately."
A collective gasp, followed by a ripple of snickers, went through the crowd.
Connor wasn't finished. "Also, place a call to Uber's global CEO. Inform him that the service provided by his Ninverton regional operations manager, a Mr. Gregory Tanner, was... unsatisfactory. I want him to receive the call within five minutes. Make it happen."
"Understood, sir," Finchley replied without a moment's hesitation. "I will execute your orders at once."
Connor ended the call.
The lobby was silent for a full three seconds before it erupted. Not with fear, but with derisive, howling laughter.
"Hoffman Group?" someone shouted. "He's lost his mind!"
Jett Maddox was doubled over, tears of mirth in his eyes. "Oh, Connor," he wheezed. "The delusions are getting worse. You think a phone call can scare us?"
Gregory Tanner smirked, shaking his head in pity. The man was clearly pathetic, resorting to such childish fantasies. He glanced at his watch, a smug look on his face as he prepared to mock the five-minute deadline.
And then, Gregory's phone began to shriek. A frantic, insistent ringing.
The caller ID made his blood run cold.
CEO - NORTH AMERICA DIVISION.
The smirk vanished from Gregory's face. He stumbled away from the crowd, his hand shaking as he answered the call.
The crowd couldn't hear the words, but they saw the effect. They saw the color drain from Gregory's face, leaving it a pasty, sweaty grey. They saw his eyes widen in sheer terror. They saw the phone slip from his nerveless fingers and crash onto the marble floor.
On the other end of the line, a voice was screaming. A voice that had just learned that the company's nine-figure annual contract with the Hoffman Group-their single largest corporate account-had been vaporized. A voice that had been told, in no uncertain terms by the global CEO himself, that it was because of the actions of one Gregory Tanner.
"Tanner! You idiot! What did you do?!" the voice roared through the phone's tiny speaker. "The Hoffman Group just pulled everything! Everything! You're fired! Get out of my sight! You're finished!"
Gregory stared into the middle distance, his world collapsing in on him.
Connor watched him, his eyes as cold and unforgiving as a winter storm.
This, he knew, was only the appetizer.
Gregory Tanner's face was a mask of pure, unadulterated panic. His career, his future, had just been annihilated in a 30-second phone call. But pride, that stubborn, foolish human instinct, made a final stand. He couldn't let them see him fall.
He picked up his phone, took a shaky breath, and turned to the expectant crowd, forcing a grotesque smile onto his lips.
"That was headquarters," he announced, his voice cracking slightly. "They... they were so impressed with how I handled this situation, with my decisive action... they've promoted me! I'm being transferred to the West Coast. A major promotion!"
The lie, so audacious and desperate, was swallowed whole by the eager crowd. A wave of relief, then applause, filled the lobby. The narrative was back on track. The good guys were winning.
Their scornful eyes turned back to Connor. He was not just a violent lunatic, but a failed one.
Jett strode forward and clapped Gregory on the shoulder, a gesture of solidarity between liars. "Congratulations, Gregory! I knew they'd see it our way. Justice prevails."
Eleonora Barlowe jabbed her cane toward Connor. "Well? What other tricks do you have up your sleeve, boy?"
Connor looked at the sea of smug, triumphant faces. He looked at Genevieve, hiding behind Jett. He looked at the fools applauding a man who had just been professionally executed.
He was done playing their game.
His voice, clear and sharp, cut through the noise. "You want the truth?"
He locked his eyes on Genevieve, pinning her in place. "The truth is that last night, my wife, Genevieve Barlowe, was with Jett Maddox."
He let that sink in, then delivered the final, devastating detail.
"In the back of my Uber."
A collective, shocked intake of breath. All eyes swiveled from Connor to Jett and Genevieve.
Genevieve's face went white. But Jett, ever the predator, reacted instantly. He threw his hands up in a gesture of pure outrage.
"Do you see?" he roared to the crowd. "This is the pathetic lashing out of a disgraced man! He's trying to drag us down with him, to tarnish Genevieve's name with his disgusting fantasies!"
He turned to the still-reeling Gregory. "Gregory, as his manager, tell them! Is this man not a known problem? Doesn't he have a history of complaints?"
Gregory saw the lifeline Jett was throwing him. He grabbed it with both hands.
"Yes! Yes, he does!" Gregory stammered, nodding vigorously. "His file is full of complaints. Harassing passengers, erratic behavior. We were going to fire him anyway!"
The "official" confirmation was all the crowd needed. The last flicker of doubt was extinguished. Connor was scum. A liar. A pervert.
Genevieve, taking her cue, burst into tears, playing the role of the falsely accused wife to perfection.
The crowd turned on Connor, their murmurs growing into a chorus of hate.
"Get out!"
"Lying piece of filth!"
"Don't let him ruin the wedding!"
Jett moved close to Connor, his voice a low, venomous whisper only he could hear. "You see, trash? In this city, reality is what I say it is. You're a ghost. Your social life, your professional life... it's over."
Connor looked at Jett's triumphant face, at the baying mob, and a strange sense of pity washed over him. They were so blind. So utterly, hopelessly blind.
Words were useless now.
As the hotel security guards closed in again, he didn't retreat. He met them. A fluid shove, a precise twist-two more guards were on the floor, groaning but not seriously injured.
He stood alone in the center of the lobby, a solitary island in a sea of hostility. He took a deep breath, ready to detonate the final bomb.
He knew what he had to say next would either shatter their world or prove to them, once and for all, that he was truly insane.
The four security guards who remained formed a cautious semi-circle around him. They had seen what he did to their colleagues. They were professionals, but they were also afraid.
Connor didn't give them time to think.
He moved like a phantom. A palm strike to the first guard's chest, knocking the wind out of him. A quick leg sweep that sent the second sprawling. He disarmed the third, who had drawn a baton, and used the man's own momentum to send him spinning into the fourth.
It was over in five seconds. Four trained men, incapacitated on the marble floor.
A stunned silence fell over the lobby. This wasn't a brawl. This was a demonstration of superior skill. A chilling, precise application of force.
Jett's smugness was replaced by a flicker of genuine fear. This wasn't just a tough guy. This was something else.
Connor stood in the center of the room, his chest rising and falling evenly. He commanded their attention without raising his voice.
He let his gaze sweep across the room, lingering for a moment on the faces of Jett, Genevieve, and Eleonora.
"You want to know who I am?" he asked, his voice calm and clear, resonating with an authority they couldn't comprehend. "You want to know what gives me the right?"
He paused, letting the question hang in the air, pregnant with menace.
Then, he delivered the truth.
"My name is Connor Wise. I am the new CEO of the Hoffman Group."
The words dropped into a pool of absolute silence. For a moment, the only sound was the distant music from the ballroom.
People stared at him, their expressions a mixture of confusion and pity. They were looking at a madman.
The silence was broken by a single, explosive bark of laughter.
It was Jett Maddox. He laughed until he was bent over, clutching his stomach, tears streaming from his eyes. His laughter was a contagion. First a few titters, then a wave of guffaws, and soon the entire lobby was filled with the sound of roaring, merciless ridicule.
"He's finally snapped!" someone yelled.
"CEO of Hoffman! That's a good one!"
Genevieve looked at him with a kind of horrified pity, as if he were a sick animal she was glad to be rid of. Eleonora's face was purple with rage at the perceived insult to a name synonymous with power and prestige.
"Arrest him!" she shrieked. "Arrest this imposter for daring to use that name!"
Just as the remaining hotel staff began to move, a commotion started at the main entrance.
The hotel's general manager came jogging into the lobby, his face flushed with a mixture of panic and reverence. He hurried to Alistair Barlowe's side.
"Sir," the manager whispered urgently. "Blair Vexler, the Vice President of the Hoffman Group, has just arrived."
The laughter died instantly. Every head turned toward the entrance. Blair Vexler was a legend in the business world. A true titan.
A woman with an aura of untouchable power strode into the lobby, flanked by two assistants. She was immaculate in a dark, custom-fitted pantsuit.
Jett and the Barlowes immediately straightened up, their faces morphing into sycophantic smiles. This was perfect. The ultimate authority had arrived to expose the fraud.
Jett intercepted her before anyone else could. He extended a hand, his smile wide and charming.
"Ms. Vexler, a pleasure. Jett Maddox," he said smoothly. "Welcome. We seem to have a bit of a situation here. An imposter, claiming to be your new CEO."
He gestured dramatically toward Connor, who stood alone and disheveled in the center of the hostile crowd.
Blair Vexler's sharp eyes followed his gesture. She saw Connor. She saw his simple, off-the-rack clothes, his youth, his defiant posture.
Her brow furrowed. A flicker of annoyance, of offense, crossed her face. This was an insult to her company. An insult to her.
And she was about to put an end to it.