She refused to believe that Niamh couldn't hear the favoritism laced through Jonathan's words.
This latest battle over the raw gemstones only cemented her certainty: Jonathan didn't have an ounce of real feeling for Niamh.
Even on her own birthday, she'd never enjoyed something as extravagant as a hot air balloon ride, personally arranged by Jonathan. But then again, those gestures weren't for Niamh's sake.
Jonathan did them for her.
With a sweet, rosy smile, Marina did her best to keep her inner satisfaction hidden from everyone at the table.
All that was left now was that single piece of paper—the divorce agreement.
Granted, Niamh had been the one to ask for the divorce, and Jonathan hadn't agreed yet.
But what Jonathan truly feared was offending his grandfather, not losing Niamh.
That stubborn old man was the only real obstacle now…
Marina chewed her lobster meat until it was tasteless, her mind elsewhere.
Preston Winslow, sitting nearby, was growing restless.
If what he'd seen that night was right, then all those best-selling designs from The Thomas Group had been Niamh's work.
He wanted to speak up, but this wasn't his place.
He glanced over at Niamh several times, but she kept her head down, quietly picking at her crab.
Of course, Niamh knew Marina had stolen the credit for her designs.
But she didn't see the point in explaining anymore.
Given Jonathan's obvious bias and trust toward Marina, it's not like he'd believe her anyway.
Besides, with divorce looming, the worse Jonathan thought of her, the better. Let him think what he wanted.
That was what she told herself, at least. But knowing it didn't shield her from the sting.
Her work for The Thomas Group was behind her now; what mattered more was proving herself in Liam Grant's challenge.
Once she got home tonight, she'd finally finish it—the piece of jewelry without a single gemstone or pearl.
"Oh, by the way, Niamh…"
Marina's syrupy voice made Niamh lift her gaze.
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