I set the mimosa down slowly. The whole table leaned in, waiting for me to crumble. Instead, I smiled. “Funny you ask, Diane. Because last Tuesday a woman brought in a 1967 Shelby for a full restoration. Insurance valued the job at $340,000. She tipped me an extra ten because I finished early.” Diane’s smile cracked at the corner. “That’s one job,” she snapped. “I have forty-three more in the queue,” I said. “Including two from your husband’s dealership. Richard’s been outsourcing his high-end restorations to my shop for three years. Didn’t he mention it?” Richard suddenly found his omelet fascinating. Diane’s head whipped toward him. “Richard?” I kept going, gentle, almost kind. “He actually offered to buy me out last spring. Said my margins were better than his entire service department. I declined, of course. Dad built that shop with his own hands.” The aunt across from me let out a tiny, delighted gasp. “But here’s the part I think you’ll really enjoy, Diane. That charity gala you chair every December? The one you brag about? The anonymous donor who covered the new pediatric wing last year, the $250,000 gift you took credit for at the ribbon cutting?” I tilted my head. “That was me. In David’s name. As a surprise for his mother, who he said worked so hard for sick kids.” The silence was beautiful. David stood up, took my hand, and looked at his mother like he was seeing her clearly for the first time. “We’re leaving,” he said. “And Mom? The wedding’s still on. You’re just not invited.” As we walked out, I heard Diane’s mimosa glass finally hit the floor. I didn’t turn around. Dad always told me grease washes off, but the look on a bully’s face when she realizes she misjudged you, that you keep forever.
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