They marched me past the champagne fountain and onto the sidewalk. I stood there in the July heat, ticket crumpled, sixty years of marriage reduced to a stain on my cuff. I didn’t argue. I just pulled out my phone and made one quiet call to my granddaughter Camille. “Sweetheart,” I said, “they wouldn’t let me pick up Grandma’s brooch.” Eleven minutes later, a matte-black SUV rolled up to the curb. Camille stepped out in a cream blazer, flanked by two men in earpieces and a woman carrying a leather portfolio stamped with a very familiar interlocking A. Vivienne saw the logo through the glass and her champagne flute froze halfway to her lips. Because Camille Aurelie-Bennett isn’t just my granddaughter. She’s the newly appointed global CEO of the entire Maison Aurelie group — the woman whose signature was on Vivienne’s paycheck, on this store’s lease, on the brooch itself. Camille walked straight past the fountain, past the frozen shoppers, and placed a gentle hand on my dirty sleeve first. Then she turned to Vivienne, whose face had gone the color of the silk runner. “You touched my grandfather,” Camille said, calm as glass. “You humiliated the man who taught me every value this house was built on. You filmed him. Your colleagues watched.” She nodded once at the woman with the portfolio, who slid a folder across the counter — surveillance timestamps, employee code violations, a termination notice already signed. “Effective immediately, Vivienne. Security will escort you to the alley. I hear loiterers use it.” Then Camille turned to the shoppers still holding up their phones. “Keep recording,” she said softly. “I want a comprehensive record.” She lifted the sapphire brooch from its velvet tray, pinned it carefully to my gardening jacket, right over my heart, and whispered, “Grandma would’ve loved seeing you wear it home, big bro.” I finally cried. Right there on the marble. And every single phone in that store caught it.
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