Congratulations, sweetheart, you’ve been replaced by someone who actually understands luxury

I didn’t cry. I didn’t run. I walked to the table, set the gift bag down gently in front of David, and smiled at Vivian. “Before I go,” I said, “there’s something you should open first.” I pulled a slim manila envelope from my clutch and placed it beside her champagne flute. Vivian laughed. “Divorce papers already? How efficient of you, dear.” “Not quite,” I said. “Those are the ownership records for Halston Wine Group.” The blonde’s fork paused mid-air. David’s face drained of color, because David worked at Halston Wine Group. He was three months away from a promotion to regional director, a promotion Vivian had bragged about at every brunch. “My grandfather founded it in 1962,” I continued softly. “I inherited controlling shares when he passed last spring. I never told you because I wanted to know you loved me without it. Consider tonight my answer.” Vivian’s champagne flute trembled. David stood up so fast his chair toppled. “Elena, wait, baby, we can talk—” “You can talk to HR on Monday,” I said. “Your termination letter is the second page. Vivian, the third page is a notice that the charity gala your foundation hosts every year at our vineyard? We’re revoking the venue. Permanently.” The blonde slid the velvet box back across the table like it had burned her. I picked up my gift bag, turned to the quartet, and asked them to please keep playing. Then I walked to the elevator with my head high, past every whispering guest, past the maître d’ who suddenly remembered my name, past the reflection of a woman who had finally stopped shrinking. My phone buzzed before the doors closed. Forty-seven missed calls from David. One text from Vivian: “Elena, darling, surely we can discuss this like family.” I typed back one word. “Charmingly.” Then I blocked them both and told my driver to take me home to the vineyard that had always, quietly, been mine.

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