I didn’t fight him. I just lifted my phone and sent one text: “Green light.” Preston kept talking, kept pushing, kept performing for the crowd behind the windows. “See, this is why families need boundaries. Some people just don’t know their place.” He parked me next to a dumpster, straightened his tie, and walked back toward the ballroom smiling. He got exactly four steps. Down the boulevard, three black SUVs rolled up in perfect formation and stopped nose-to-nose with the valet stand. Doors opened at the same second. Eight men in dark suits stepped out, earpieces in, and every single one of them turned and faced me. The lead agent walked straight past Preston without looking at him, knelt beside my chair, and said clearly enough for the whole entrance to hear, “Admiral, we’re ready when you are, sir.” Preston’s smile cracked. My sister dropped her glass on the marble. Inside the ballroom, the string quartet stopped playing because the Secretary of the Navy had just stepped out of the second SUV to shake my hand. Preston stumbled forward, laughing nervously. “Admiral? No, no — there’s a mistake, he’s — he’s just Chloe’s brother, he’s disabled, he —” The Secretary turned to him slowly. “Son, that man in the chair runs the classified program your father’s entire defense contract depends on. And as of tonight, he sits on the board that renews it.” Preston went white. He looked at my sister. She wouldn’t look back. I finally spoke, calm as the ramp he told me to use. “Preston. Service entrance is around back. With the rest of the people who don’t belong in this room.” Two agents gently turned my chair toward the main doors. The gala parted like water. And behind me, I heard Preston start to beg.
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