What Vivienne didn’t know was that the cardboard box wasn’t the only thing I was carrying out. Three months earlier, my lawyer Margaret had called me about an irregularity. Vivienne had been quietly rerouting our couture commissions — the Saudi royal gown, the Vogue Italia cover dress, the Hartwell wedding suite — through a shell company called Lumière Atelier, registered in her sister’s name. She was skimming nearly forty percent off the top and billing my studio for the difference. I didn’t confront her. I let her keep digging. Instead, I called every artisan, every beader, every fabric house in the Garment District who had ever cried in my arms over a deadline or borrowed money for their child’s surgery. I told them what was coming. They waited. Two weeks after my ‘termination,’ Vivienne walked into the atelier to find every workstation empty. Forty-three artisans. Gone. Their resignation letters were stacked neatly on her desk, each one with the same handwritten line: We work for Eleanor. Then the Hartwell family called to cancel their three-million-dollar contract, citing ‘a loss of confidence in current leadership.’ Then Vogue Italia. Then the Saudi royal house. By Friday, Vivienne discovered the clause I had buried in her director contract three years ago — the one she’d signed without reading, the same way I’d signed mine. If gross client attrition exceeded sixty percent in any quarter, full creative control reverted to the founder. Permanently. I walked back through those atelier doors on Monday morning in my camel coat, sketchbook under my arm. Vivienne was waiting, mascara streaked, papers trembling in her hand. ‘Eleanor, please — we can talk about this.’ I set my sketchbook down on the drafting table, the same one she’d dropped my termination letter on. ‘Pack your desk by noon, sweetheart,’ I said softly. ‘The artisans agree. Your little embezzlement era is over.’
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