Smile for the cameras, Lydia, and remember whose name is on this building before

The revolving doors turned, and in walked Mr. Oyelaran, chairman of Meridian Holdings — the silver-haired investor every person in that room had been chasing for a decade. Vivienne’s smile snapped into place like a seatbelt. She floated toward him with both hands extended. ‘Mr. Oyelaran, what an honor, please, let me introduce my son Daniel, the future of Hawthorne—’ He looked right past her. Right past Daniel. His eyes found mine across the lobby, and he smiled the way an uncle smiles at a niece he hasn’t seen in too long. ‘Lydia,’ he said warmly, walking straight to me. ‘I was beginning to worry I had the wrong gala.’ The room went quiet in that specific way rooms do when money realizes it’s been looking the wrong direction. I kissed his cheek. ‘Thank you for coming, Tunde.’ Vivienne’s champagne flute trembled. ‘You two… know each other?’ ‘Know each other?’ he laughed. ‘Lydia’s been running the acquisition for six months. Meridian is buying out the Hawthorne Foundation’s debt on Monday. Didn’t she tell you?’ I opened my clutch and handed Vivienne the envelope. Inside was the signed offer — and the clause she’d never read in the original charter, the one that made me, as a board-appointed trustee, the deciding vote on any sale. Daniel had insisted I take the seat three years ago as a ‘symbolic gesture.’ His mother had laughed at the time. She wasn’t laughing now. ‘You can keep the building, Vivienne,’ I said gently, smoothing her trembling lapel. ‘But the name on it changes Monday morning. And the children’s table? I think you’ll be more comfortable there this year.’ I turned to the room of frozen donors and raised my untouched glass. ‘To new chapters.’ Daniel found me by the elevators twenty minutes later, pale, stammering apologies he’d rehearsed in the car. I pressed the divorce papers into his hand the same way his mother had pressed me into corners for three years. Quietly. Decoratively. Final.

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