Vivienne yanked my tote bag off my shoulder and dumped it onto the floor, kicking my wallet under a display case. “Pick it up, roach. On your hands and knees, where you belong.” A security guard walked over, and for a split second I thought maybe he’d help. Instead he grabbed my elbow and started dragging me toward the door. Customers pulled out their phones, not to record HER, but to record ME being humiliated. One woman actually said, “Ugh, they really let anyone wander in from the street now.” I finally got one eye open just as the front doors slammed shut behind me on the sidewalk. That’s when three black Escalades screeched to a stop at the curb. Six men in identical charcoal suits stepped out in perfect sync. The lead man, silver-haired, spotted me on the ground and his face went white. “Ma’am. We are so sorry. We lost your detail in traffic.” He helped me up, brushed off my hoodie, and handed me a handkerchief for my eyes. Then he turned toward the boutique. Vivienne was watching through the glass, still smirking, until she saw the tiny embroidered crest on his lapel — the same crest stitched onto every product in her store. Her smirk froze. Her mouth opened. The silver-haired man opened the door for me and said, loud enough for every clerk to hear, “Madame Chairman, would you like to conduct the quarterly staff review now, or after we handle your mother’s gift?” Vivienne’s coworker dropped a $12,000 handbag onto the marble. The woman who’d turned her back was suddenly very interested in her shoes. And Vivienne — the same Vivienne who had sprayed perfume in the eyes of the majority owner of Maison Aurelle International — took one step backward and knocked over the entire perfume display behind her. I walked back through those doors, one eye still red, and smiled for the first time all afternoon.
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