I sat in eight inches of cold fountain water, mascara running, and I did not cry. Duke was already in the water beside me, gripping the strap of my chair in his teeth, trying to pull me upright the way he’d been trained. A woman in pearls actually laughed. My father, three feet away, looked at his shoes. Vivienne leaned down, phone out, filming. “Smile for the group chat, Clara. This one’s going viral.” Then the double doors at the north entrance opened, and every phone in the room lowered at once. Four men in charcoal suits walked in, earpieces, the kind of stillness that makes a room go quiet without being asked. Behind them, General Marcus Halden—my godfather, the man who’d taught me to shoot free throws from this chair, the current Director of the Veterans Wellness Coalition—crossed the marble floor in twelve long strides. He didn’t look at Vivienne. He looked at me. “Commander,” he said, and the room heard it. “Your keynote is in six minutes.” Two of his aides lifted my chair out of the fountain like it weighed nothing. A third handed me a folded dry shawl already monogrammed with my initials—CGH, Clara Grace Hartwell. As in Hartwell Foundation. As in the name on the building. Vivienne’s phone slipped an inch in her hand. Her friends stepped back from her like she was on fire. My father finally lifted his head, and I watched him understand, in real time, that he had spent nine years choosing the wrong daughter. General Halden turned to Vivienne, and his voice was almost gentle. “Ma’am. You just assaulted the founder and keynote speaker of tonight’s event. And her federally certified service animal.” He nodded once at the security team behind him. “They’ll need your ID.” Duke shook the water off his coat, walked past Vivienne without a glance, and sat at my right wheel. I rolled forward, soaked gown and all, straight toward the stage. I didn’t look back. I didn’t have to. The whole room was already looking at her.
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