I didn’t remove the pendant. Instead, I smiled softly and walked toward the ballroom, where the auctioneer was calibrating his microphone. Cordelia trailed behind me, whispering threats about calling David down to “handle his mess.” What Cordelia didn’t know was that three weeks earlier, I had accepted a position she’d never bothered to ask about. When the auction director, Mr. Halloway, spotted me, his face lit up. “Dr. Marchetti! We’re so honored you accepted the appraisal chair this year. The Vanderbergs specifically requested you authenticate their emerald lot.” Cordelia’s champagne flute paused mid-air. I turned to her with the same soft smile. “Cordelia, I don’t believe I ever mentioned my work. I’m a gemologist with Sotheby’s European division. This pendant?” I touched it gently. “It belonged to my grandmother, Contessa Marchetti of Milan. It’s a nineteenth-century Ceylon sapphire, roughly four hundred thousand dollars. I wore it tonight because tomorrow I’m donating it to the foundation’s scholarship fund for first-generation college students. The kind of scholarship David received when his father lost everything in 2008, before you remarried into the Whitmore name.” Cordelia’s face drained of color. I hadn’t been David’s charity project. I’d been the one quietly funding the foundation’s largest anonymous gift for two years, ever since I learned David proposed with his late father’s ring instead of asking his stepfather for money. The Vanderberg heiress arrived moments later and greeted me by name in Italian, mentioning our previous appraisal together in Geneva. David descended the staircase, saw his mother trembling beside me, and simply took my hand. “Mother, I hope you’ve properly welcomed my wife. Elena’s the reason the scholarship wing exists.” Cordelia never spoke to me with contempt again. She barely spoke to me at all.
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