Sweetie, just smile and pour the champagne — nobody invited the help to actually

I set the bottle down gently. “Catherine,” I said, “before I sit — or stand — I’d love to make a quick toast.” She waved her ringed hand. “Oh, let her, it’ll be precious.” I lifted my water glass. “To Whitfield Holdings,” I said, “the family company that’s been bleeding cash for three years because someone kept skimming from the charity wing to fund her Hamptons renovations.” The table went silent. Catherine’s smile froze halfway up her face. “Excuse me?” I pulled a slim folder from my bag — the one she’d mocked as “that sad little tote.” Inside: bank transfers, forged signatures, and a forensic audit with my name on the cover page. “I’m the forensic accountant the board hired in January,” I said. “Anonymously. Through Daniel’s uncle. The one you stopped inviting to Christmas.” Across the table, Mr. Hendricks — Catherine’s biggest investor — slowly set down his fork. “Catherine. Is this true?” Daniel finally looked up. Not at his mother. At me. “You finished it?” he whispered. I nodded. “Filed this morning.” Catherine stood so fast her chair scraped. “This is a misunderstanding, she’s lying, she’s always been jealous —” “Sit down, Catherine,” Hendricks said quietly. “We’ll discuss this Monday. With lawyers.” She sank back down, mascara already running. I turned to the waiter hovering behind me. “Could you bring the lady a glass of water? She looks like she could use it.” Then I pulled out my own chair, sat beside my husband, and unfolded my napkin. Daniel reached under the table and squeezed my hand so hard it almost hurt. “Happy anniversary,” he murmured. I smiled at Catherine across the centerpiece. “To family,” I said, lifting my glass. “The ones who lift you up — and the ones who finally get lifted out.” She didn’t touch her champagne. I drank mine slowly. It tasted like every swallowed insult, finally coming back up as gold.

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