The manager went pale. “Ma’am, are you sure?” I nodded. Vivienne rolled her eyes. “Oh God, she’s going to complain about the water. How mortifying.” Portia filmed me under the table for her group chat. Then the head chef walked out in his whites, followed by the general manager, the sommelier, and two men in dark suits from the hospitality group. All four of them stopped at my chair. The chef bowed slightly. “Ms. Ashford. We didn’t know you were dining tonight. Your table should have been ready an hour ago.” Vivienne’s champagne flute froze halfway to her lipstick. Portia’s phone slid out of her hand and clattered on the marble. Ethan’s mouth opened, closed, opened again. The general manager turned to my mother-in-law with a very polite, very cold smile. “Madam, you’ve been seated at Ms. Ashford’s personal table. She owns the building, the restaurant, and the hospitality group that employs everyone in this room, including the concierge who upgraded your reservation as a favor to her.” I finally spoke. “Vivienne. The affordable side of the menu you pointed at? I designed it during the pandemic so line cooks could afford to eat here on their break.” She tried to laugh. It came out as a small, dry click. “Nora, darling, we were only teasing—” “You called me a charity case in front of my staff.” I stood up slowly, smoothing my one nice dress. “So here is my charity. Ethan, the prenup you signed protects everything you came in with. Walk out with me tonight and it stays that way. Stay seated and defend your mother, and you walk out with exactly what you brought to this marriage: nothing.” Ethan stood so fast his chair fell over. Vivienne grabbed his wrist. “Sit down. She’s bluffing about the money. She’s been hiding money like a criminal.” The general manager cleared his throat. “Madam, Ms. Ashford also owns the parking garage. Your car has been released to valet. Please enjoy your walk.”
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