“Before I sign,” I said softly, “may I say a few words? Brides are allowed toasts, aren’t they?” Vivienne waved her ringed hand like she was granting me a final mercy. I tapped my glass. The room hushed. “Three years ago,” I began, “a small biotech firm called Helix-Ardent was about to go under. A quiet investor bought sixty-one percent of the shares for almost nothing. That investor asked to stay anonymous because she didn’t want her fiancé’s family to treat her differently.” Vivienne’s smile thinned. Daniel finally looked up. “Last quarter,” I continued, “Helix-Ardent secured the federal contract that tripled its valuation. The Marchand Group has been desperately trying to acquire it for eight months. Every offer rejected. Every email ignored.” I set the pen down. “Because the majority shareholder, Vivienne, is the broke, useless forty-two-year-old you just ordered to sign away her future.” The champagne flute slipped from her fingers and shattered against the floor. Daniel stood up. “Eliza, I didn’t know—” “That’s the problem,” I said. “You didn’t ask. You sat there while she called me trash in front of our families and you decided silence was safer than love.” I slid the prenup back across the table, unsigned, and laid a second document on top of it. “This is the buyout rejection, officially refiled this morning. And this,” I added, dropping my engagement ring onto the paper with a clean little chime, “is my answer to both of you.” Vivienne lunged for my wrist. I stepped back. “Careful. You’re speaking to the woman who owns the building your headquarters leases.” My sister started clapping. Then a waiter. Then half the room. I walked out under the chandeliers I’d once dreamed of dancing beneath, and for the first time in three years, my shoulders weren’t shaking. They were straight. Outside, the night air tasted like a future nobody could sign away from me again.
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