Vivienne didn’t notice me climb the steps until the string quartet stopped mid-note. I tapped the microphone. The room turned. Two hundred faces — senators, socialites, Daniel’s entire firm — swiveled toward the ‘help’ who had suddenly become the main event. “Good evening,” I said, voice steady. “Since Vivienne reminded me I’m just the help, I thought I’d help one more time — by clearing up a misunderstanding about whose roof we’re standing under.” Vivienne’s wine glass froze halfway to her lips. I pulled a folded deed from inside the tray. “This estate was placed into a family trust in 1998. My grandmother, Eleanor Hartwell, was the original trustee. When she passed, the property transferred to her only living heir.” I smiled gently. “Me.” Gasps rippled like wind through wheat. Vivienne had spent twenty years telling everyone she’d ‘married into’ the Bellamy estate. What she never knew — what Daniel and I discovered six months ago when the trust attorney finally tracked me down — was that her late husband had been leasing the property from my grandmother for decades. Vivienne had inherited nothing but the lease. And the lease expired last Tuesday. “I’ve been quiet because I wanted to be sure,” I continued. “I’m sure now. The new lease terms are posted on the front gate. Anyone Vivienne has publicly humiliated in this house over the years is welcome to stay as my guest. Vivienne — you have until Sunday to collect your things.” Daniel walked to the stage, took my hand, and faced his mother. “I tried to warn you,” he said. “For three years, I begged you to be kind to her. You chose this.” Vivienne’s mouth opened and closed like a fish drowning in air. The senator’s wife she’d been bragging to all night quietly set down her glass and walked out. One by one, others followed. I stepped off the stage, set the empty tray in Vivienne’s trembling hands, and whispered, “Smile, Vivienne. Pour the champagne. Remember whose roof you’re standing under.”
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