The manager arrived in under a minute. Young man, navy suit, name tag that read DEVON. He didn’t look at Tyler. He looked at me, gave a small nod, and said, “Mrs. Hartley. Is everything to your satisfaction this evening?” Brielle’s smile cracked first. Tyler laughed, the loud kind people use to cover panic. “Mom, relax, he’s just the floor guy.” Devon kept his eyes on me. “Ma’am, would you like the table cleared?” I slid the transfer papers toward him. “Devon, would you please shred these in front of my son? And then bring the binder from the safe in my office.” Tyler’s face went the color of the tablecloth. He hadn’t realized the office on the forty-second floor was still mine. He hadn’t realized the safe was still mine. He hadn’t realized the hotel — every brick, every key card, every employee paycheck — was still mine, because I had never actually signed the trust he kept bragging about at Sunday dinners. Devon returned with the binder. I opened it to the page my attorney had tabbed three months ago, the day I overheard Brielle on speakerphone calling me “the obstacle.” I turned it toward Tyler. “This is the updated beneficiary list. Your name was removed in August. The Hartley Group goes into a charitable trust for the housekeeping staff’s children’s college fund the day I die.” Brielle stood up so fast her chair tipped. Tyler whispered, “Mom, please, we can talk —” I picked up my purse. “You wanted the adults to take over, sweetheart. They already have.” I told Devon dinner was on the house for every other table, and to escort my son and his wife to the elevator. As I walked past the piano, the player started my husband’s favorite song without me asking. I tipped him a hundred dollars and rode down alone, pearls still on, smiling for the first time all year.
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