“Stand up, Claire. Stand up and thank Diane for the free hair treatment.” That was Marcus’s older brother Preston, laughing into his wine. His wife Ashley filmed it on her phone, giggling. “Post it, post it — caption it ‘Cinderella’s makeover.'” I stood. Slowly. Marinara sliding down my collarbone. I didn’t cry. I set my napkin down, walked past Diane, and stepped out into the hallway to make one phone call. “Gerald. It’s Claire. Pull it. All of it. Tonight.” Six minutes later the maître d’ walked into the private room, pale, and whispered something to Diane. Her wine glass hit the tablecloth. Because the private room? Le Bernardin’s entire east wing? Was booked under Holloway Hospitality Group. My company. The one I built at twenty-four after selling my first restaurant tech platform. The one that quietly owned the catering contract Diane’s husband’s law firm had just signed a three-year deal on. The one whose foundation had been paying Preston’s daughter’s private school tuition through a scholarship fund Ashley bragged about at every brunch. Gerald froze all of it in the time it took me to walk back to my chair. Diane stood up. “Claire, sweetheart — I didn’t — it was a joke, we were only —” I picked up my clutch. Slid the platinum card back into it — the one nobody had ever seen me use. Marcus finally looked up at me, and I saw him understand, piece by piece, every dismissive comment his family had made for two years. I leaned down and kissed the top of Diane’s head, right where she’d dumped the pasta on mine. “Happy anniversary, Diane. The gift is in the mail. Well — it was.” Then I walked out. Marcus followed. Preston was already on the phone with his father, screaming. Ashley had deleted the video. And somewhere in a glass tower on Federal Street, Gerald was drafting the termination letters.
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