Vanessa tapped the microphone three times, the way people do when they want a room to notice them. “Thank you all for coming,” she purred, “to celebrate the Marsh family legacy. As the new face of this gallery—” She paused for applause that didn’t come. Daniel shifted uncomfortably beside her. I had warned him, six months ago, when he begged me to put Vanessa on the payroll as a “consultant.” I’d said no. He’d gone behind my back and told her the gallery was a shared family asset. He’d told her I was just the bookkeeper. I let her keep talking. I let her thank donors she had never met. I let her gesture at paintings whose artists she could not name. Then the lights dimmed, and the projection screen behind her flickered to life. It was the slideshow I’d prepared for the real announcement. The first slide read: WHITFIELD CONTEMPORARY — FOUNDED AND OWNED BY ELENA MARSH. The second slide showed the wire transfers Vanessa had quietly siphoned from the gala’s pre-sale tickets into a personal account labeled “V’s Boutique Fund.” Forty-one thousand dollars. Gasps rolled through the room like a wave. Vanessa spun around, her face draining of color. “That’s— that’s a mistake—” The third slide was a letter from the board, signed that morning, formally barring her from the premises. I stepped back to the microphone and gently took it from her trembling hand. “Thank you, Vanessa, for the introduction,” I said softly. “You can leave through the side door. The adults will take it from here.” Daniel didn’t follow her out. He sank into a chair near the Rothko, head in his hands. A donor I’d known for years touched my arm and whispered, “How long did you know?” I smiled at the room — my room — and answered, “Long enough to wait for the perfect lighting.”
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