I walked to the back office, Vivienne’s heels clicking behind me like she’d already won. I pulled a leather folder from the top drawer and laid it on the reclaimed-oak desk. “Before I sign anything,” I said, “you should know who actually owns this building.” Vivienne laughed. “Some landlord who’ll be thrilled to deal with a Whitlock.” I slid the deed across the desk. Her name wasn’t on it. Mine was. And above mine, in bold black ink, was the name of the holding company that owned the entire block, including the Whitlock Foundation’s leased headquarters two streets over. “Six months ago,” I said, “your foundation defaulted on rent. The previous owner sold the portfolio. I bought it. Quietly. Because Daniel asked me to protect his family’s reputation.” The color drained from her face. Daniel’s head snapped up. “You did what?” he whispered. I turned to him. “I covered three hundred thousand in arrears so your mother could keep pretending she was self-made. I never told anyone. I never asked for thanks.” Vivienne tried to speak. Nothing came out. The board members suddenly found their phones fascinating. “Here’s what happens now,” I said. “The gala will be held here. My name goes on the program, top billing, as host and primary donor. The featured artists will be the immigrant women from the Queens workshop I fund, the ones you called ‘charity props’ last spring. And the Whitlock Foundation will publicly credit Mia Reyes Gallery as its landlord and benefactor.” Vivienne’s lip trembled. “And if I refuse?” I picked up my brush again. “Then I send the eviction notice I had drafted this morning. Your choice, Vivienne. Janitor’s daughter or homeless foundation.” She signed every paper I put in front of her. Daniel drove her home in silence. That night he came back alone, knelt beside my easel, and asked what color he could mix for me. I handed him cobalt blue.
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