You embarrassed me in front of my entire firm, Elena, so consider yourself uninvited

I didn’t go to the gala. I went to the airport. My sister Marta had been begging me for a year to fly out to Boston and finally sign the paperwork on the little literacy nonprofit our late mother left in a trust — the one David always called ‘your mom’s cute hobby fund.’ What David never bothered to read was the trust valuation. Mama hadn’t left a hobby. She’d left forty-three percent ownership in the publishing house that printed half the legal textbooks in the northeast. Including the ones stacked on David’s office shelf. I signed the papers Saturday morning over black coffee and a cinnamon roll. By Monday, I was officially the majority stakeholder of Hallen & Roe Legal Press. By Tuesday, I’d sat in my first board meeting — in jeans, because I wanted to. On Wednesday, David’s managing partner called him into a conference room. Their firm’s entire textbook licensing contract was up for renewal, and the new majority owner had ‘concerns about ethics representation.’ David called me eleven times. I answered on the twelfth, from the back of a car service, wearing the same navy dress. ‘Elena, baby, whatever this is, we can fix it. Come to the gala tonight, please.’ I smiled at the window. ‘I can’t, David. I’m hosting my own event.’ That night, three blocks from his gala, I cut the ribbon on the Sofia Marquez Reading Center, named after my mother. Every partner from his firm was there — because I’d invited them personally, and because I now signed their licensing checks. David showed up at the door in his tuxedo, red-faced, pleading. Security asked if he was on the list. I looked up from the podium, microphone in hand, and said gently, ‘He’s not. He was uninvited.’ Then I turned back to a room full of children, teachers, and the partners who used to call me the little schoolteacher — and I gave the toast I’d rehearsed since Tuesday.

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