You’re nothing but the help, Eleanor — so smile, refill the champagne, and try

Marcus stepped forward, his jaw tight, but I touched his wrist. “Let her finish,” I whispered. Vivian smirked and raised her flute. “A toast — to my son finally outgrowing his charity phase.” Laughter rippled through the crowd. I walked to the microphone the DJ had abandoned and tapped it twice. The garden went quiet. “Mrs. Ashcroft, you’ve been so generous tonight. I’d like to return the favor.” I pulled a folded paper from the gift box. “Three months ago, the Ashcroft Foundation announced it was acquiring the Riverbend Elementary lot — my school — to build luxury condos. The board needed one final signature from the anonymous donor who owned the original land trust.” I unfolded the deed. “My grandfather, Hector Reyes, was the groundskeeper at Riverbend for forty years. When the district tried to sell in 1998, he bought the land himself with every dollar he’d saved and placed it in a trust for the children. That trust passed to me last spring.” Vivian’s glass began to tremble. “I declined the sale, Mrs. Ashcroft. Which is why your foundation is, as of this morning, sixty million dollars short on a project your investors have already been paid for.” Gasps. Phones rose. The chairman of her board — seated two tables away — stood up slowly, face gray. “I came here tonight to give your family this.” I held up the deed. “A donation. In Marcus’s name. To keep Riverbend open forever.” I set it on the cake table beside her untouched champagne. “You were right about one thing. I am the help. I help children whose mothers clean houses like mine did. I help them believe people like you don’t get to decide what they’re worth.” Marcus took my hand, removed his mother’s engagement ring from his pocket — the heirloom she’d refused to give me — and slid his grandfather’s simple gold band onto my finger instead. “We’re leaving, Mom. Don’t call.” As we walked out, I heard Vivian’s voice crack for the first time in her life. The catering assistant didn’t look back.

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