I didn’t move. I just pulled my phone from the hidden pocket my seamstress had sewn into the dress and made one call. “Leave it with me,” I said, and hung up. My sister laughed and told everyone I was calling my imaginary lawyer. Daniel finally looked at me then, and I smiled at him for the first time all day. Four minutes later the double doors at the back of the chapel opened and six men in charcoal suits walked in, followed by a woman in a navy blazer carrying a leather folio. The room went still. The woman walked straight past my sister, past Daniel, and handed the folio to Daniel’s father. “Mr. Whitaker, effective this morning, your services were no longer required as regional director. The board voted at six a.m. The new majority shareholder requested we deliver the notice in person.” His face drained. He asked who the new majority shareholder was. The woman turned and looked at me and waited. My future mother-in-law laughed and said I was a hostess at a steakhouse. I told her I hostessed on Saturdays because I liked the tips and the quiet. Monday through Friday I ran the private equity group that had quietly bought seventy-one percent of Whitaker Holdings over the last eighteen months, the same group my sister had begged for an internship at last spring under a fake name. I looked at Daniel and told him I had planned to sign it all over to him as a wedding gift tonight. Instead I told my head of security to escort the Whitaker family, and my sister, off property before the photographer finished packing his lens. Daniel finally whispered my name like he was seeing me for the first time. I handed my bouquet to the flower girl, told her to keep it, and walked out the front doors alone. The chapel bells rang anyway.
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