“Before I sign,” I said softly, “you should probably read the second page.” Vivienne rolled her eyes and flipped it over. Her smirk wavered. It wasn’t a resignation. It was a notarized transfer of voting shares — David’s shares — dated three days before he passed. He had signed every percent of his stake over to me. Not to the family trust. Not to his mother. To me. “This is fake,” she hissed, but her voice cracked on the second syllable. I slid my phone across the desk. On the screen, our attorney, Marcus Chen, waited on a live call, the courthouse seal visible behind him. “It was filed Monday morning,” Marcus said pleasantly. “Mrs. Hartley now holds seventy-one percent of the gallery. Ms. Vivienne Hartley holds four.” The Birkin slid off the desk. She didn’t notice. “You think you can blacklist me in Manhattan?” I asked. “Sweetheart, I am Manhattan. The Gagosian dinner Thursday? My invitation. The Basel booth in December? My signature. The lease on this building, the one your mother co-signed before the market turned? Up for renewal in ninety days. Guess whose name is on the renewal clause.” Her mouth opened. Nothing came out. I stood, smoothed my dress, and walked to the door David had walked through ten thousand times. “You have until five to clear the desk,” I said. “Security is already in the lobby. And Vivienne — the next time you try to bury a widow, make sure she isn’t the one holding the shovel.” Three months later, the gallery doubled its valuation. Vivienne opened a pop-up in Jersey City that closed in six weeks. At David’s memorial show, I hung his favorite painting — a small, fierce portrait of me he had done the year we met — right above the desk where she had tried to break me. Underneath it, a brass plate read: *She let them underestimate her. Once.*
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