“Exactly.”
The press release promised a fall launch in Savannah: luxury coastal furniture, custom interiors, private clients, investor showcase, national design press.
Everett needed a supplier. Harper needed credibility. They both needed someone who could build the kind of furniture that made wealthy people feel tasteful.
They needed me.
They just didn’t know it.
Claire read the rest and leaned back slowly.
“Nathan, this is insane.”
“It’s legal.”
“That’s not the same as sane.”
“I’m not asking you to break any laws.”
“You’re asking me to help you build a ghost company.”
“I’m asking you to help me understand vendor pathways.”
She stared at me. “That sentence belongs in court.”
I smiled for the first time in a week.
Claire didn’t smile back.
“What do you actually want?”
“I want their company to choose a supplier they trust. A supplier that looks clean, professional, and unrelated to me.”
“And then?”
“And then they get what they ordered.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Nathan.”
I looked out the window at the wet parking lot.
“I build things that last because I choose to. People think failure is accidental. It isn’t always. Sometimes failure is the truest design.”
Claire pushed the folder back.
“No one gets hurt,” she said.
“No one.”
“I mean it.”
“So do I.”
“No collapsing shelves. No broken bones. No lawsuits because someone’s grandmother sat in a chair and ended up in the hospital.”
“It won’t be like that.”
“Then what will it be like?”
“Embarrassing. Expensive. Public.”
Claire closed her eyes. “You need therapy.”
“I need timing.”
“You need both.”
But she didn’t leave.
That was how I knew she would help.
Not because she approved. Claire didn’t approve of anything that involved feelings. She helped because she respected precision. She helped because Harper had once made a joke at a dinner party about my work being “woodworking cosplay,” and Claire had never forgotten it. She helped because some people cannot stand seeing craftsmanship disrespected.
Over the next months, I became the perfect husband.
I made coffee every morning. I asked Harper about her new job. I listened while she described Everett’s “vision,” his “network,” his “instinct for luxury markets.” She said his name casually at first, then more often, then constantly, as if repetition could make him legitimate.
Everett says.
Everett thinks.
Everett wants.
Every sentence was a nail in the coffin of our marriage.
Vivian visited every Sunday and acted like nothing had happened. She praised Harper’s new opportunity and called Everett “brilliant,” then asked me if my “little shop” was still busy.
“Very busy,” I said.
“How nice,” she replied, already bored.
Madison called me twice. I didn’t answer the first time. The second time, I did.
“I’m sorry,” she said immediately. “I should’ve told you.”
“Yes.”
“Harper said it was complicated.”
“It wasn’t.”
Madison cried quietly. I didn’t comfort her. She was kind, but kindness after cowardice is still late.
In June, Everett’s company issued a supplier bid for its launch collection. Dining tables, lounge chairs, floating cabinets, display shelving, custom reception pieces. The kind of work that could define a brand.
A new LLC submitted a proposal.
Lowcountry Form Works.
Registered in Georgia.
Public owner: Claire’s retired uncle, a man who spent most of his time fishing and signed papers without asking many questions after Claire explained enough to satisfy him and not enough to implicate him.
The portfolio was mine, but not under my name. The language was clean. The pricing was attractive, but not suspicious. The references were real enough to survive a lazy check.
Harper recommended them.
Of course she did.
She liked the lines. She liked the coastal restraint. She liked the “quiet masculinity” of the woodwork.
I knew because she had learned that phrase from me.
At dinner one night, she showed me photos from the proposal.
“What do you think?” she asked.
I looked at my own table design on her laptop, rendered under another company’s name.
“It has potential.”
“You always say that when you’re jealous.”
I looked at her.
She smiled to soften it, but the insult had already landed.
“Maybe I am.”
Her face brightened. She liked that. My jealousy made her feel chosen.
She reached across the table and touched my hand.
“I know this year has been strange,” she said. “But this launch could change everything for us.”
Us.
I almost admired the audacity.
By August, Lowcountry Form Works had the contract.
By September, I had rented an old tobacco barn outside Beaufort and turned it into a private workshop.
By October, I was building the future Harper thought she deserved.
And every night when I came home covered in sawdust, she barely looked up from her phone.
“Working late again?” she’d ask.
“Yes.”
“Good. We need the money.”
I would kiss the top of her head and smile.
Because for the first time in our marriage, Harper was telling the truth.
PART 4
The barn became my church.