"You look like a degenerate gambler who just lost the house," Julian mocked. "How did the little pool drama end last night?"
At the mention of the pool, Franklin's expression darkened into pure ice.
"I threw that vicious woman out," Franklin sneered, loosening his tie.
Julian's hand froze halfway to his mouth.
The playful smirk vanished from his face.
"Are you talking about Cadence?" Julian asked, his brow furrowing.
"She pushed Isabelle into the water, got caught, and then tried to play the victim by disappearing and filing for divorce," Franklin snapped, his voice tight with irritation.
Julian set the glass down.
He walked over to the desk, planting both hands flat on the polished wood, leaning in close.
"Franklin," Julian said, his voice dropping an octave. "I was the one who jumped into the pool last night. I pulled Cadence out."
Franklin's fingers stopped typing on his keyboard.
He looked up, a flicker of confusion crossing his face. "What are you talking about? Isabelle was the one drowning."
Julian let out a harsh, disbelieving laugh.
"Isabelle was splashing around in the shallow end," Julian stated clearly. "Cadence sank straight to the bottom of the ten-foot deep end like a stone."
Franklin stared at him.
"That wasn't an act, Franklin," Julian stated clearly, his voice losing all its usual playful sarcasm. "The way she looked when I pulled her out... it was like she was actually dying. You can't fake that kind of visceral, bone-deep terror. She is absolutely terrified of the water."
Instead of shock, a cold, mocking smile touched Franklin's lips. "An act, Julian. A very convincing one, I'll admit. But you seem to have forgotten something."
He leaned back in his chair, steepling his fingers. "That woman has a professional diving license. She got it two years before we were married. 'Bone-deep terror' of water? Don't make me laugh. She's just a desperate actress."
Julian blinked, genuinely surprised by this piece of information. He frowned, not in argument, but in thought.
"A diving license? Well, that's... odd," Julian murmured, walking back to the bar to retrieve his glass. He swirled the amber liquid, his gaze distant. "But that just makes it stranger, doesn't it?"
He turned back to Franklin. "Okay, let's say she was acting. But why that specific act? Everyone in our circle knows the story. Isabelle developed her severe aquaphobia after she heroically pulled you from the Hudson River four years ago. Why would Cadence, on the night she decides to divorce you, suddenly start mimicking the exact same trauma as her rival? It's a bizarre play."
The word "mimicking" struck Franklin with an unpleasant jolt.
He had been so certain, so wrapped up in the narrative of Cadence's viciousness, that he'd only seen her actions as a clumsy attempt to frame Isabelle.
But Julian's question reframed the entire event. It wasn't about framing. It was about... copying.
Why would a certified diver pretend to drown? Why would a woman who hated Isabelle copy her most well-known vulnerability? The logic was deeply flawed. It was nonsensical.
A seed of irritating, unwelcome doubt began to sprout in the barren ground of his certainty. He tried to crush it. She was just trying to get attention, to make him feel guilty. But the explanation felt thin, unsatisfying.
The rage he'd felt moments ago was replaced by a simmering, confusing frustration. The clean lines of heroes and villains in his mind began to blur at the edges.
He reached for the whiskey Julian had poured earlier, not to down it, but to hold the cool, heavy glass in his hand, his knuckles white. What the hell was Cadence playing at?
The office door clicked open.
Isabelle walked in, wearing a pristine white Chanel dress, holding a designer bento box with a sweet, practiced smile.
Franklin's eyes locked onto her.
The absolute, blind trust he usually felt was still there, but for the first time, it was clouded by a faint, nagging question.
Isabelle felt the shift in the air instantly.
She glanced nervously at Julian, then hurried over to Franklin, reaching out to loop her arm through his.
Franklin's muscles tensed.
He leaned back smoothly, dodging her touch completely. The movement was less a cold rejection and more an instinctual retreat, his mind still wrestling with the puzzle Julian had just thrown at him.
"Why aren't you resting at home?" Franklin asked, his voice clipped and distracted, devoid of its usual warmth.
Isabelle's hand hovered in the empty air.
Her smile froze, panic flaring in her chest as she stared at the man pulling away from her.