Her nostrils flared. “Don’t act like you came here innocent.”
“No,” you said. “I came here prepared.”
Grant’s head snapped toward you.
That was when you reached into your coat again and pulled out a slim envelope. White. Sealed. Plain. The kind of envelope that made rich men sweat because it did not need decoration to be dangerous.
Grant recognized it immediately.
“Ms. Bell,” he said, dropping his voice. “Can we discuss this privately?”
Vanessa laughed once, too loudly. “Discuss what privately? Grant, stop acting like she matters.”
He turned on her so fast she actually stepped back.
“Vanessa,” he hissed, “be quiet.”
The room heard it.
And Vanessa heard something worse than anger in his voice.
Panic.
You let the silence stretch. You wanted her to feel every second of it. Not because you were cruel. Because she had mistaken your quiet for weakness, and you had spent ten years learning the difference.
When you were sixteen, quiet meant survival. It meant keeping your head down while girls like Vanessa filmed you crying in the hallway. It meant pretending not to hear your name written on bathroom mirrors in red lipstick. It meant picking wet pages of your journal off the cafeteria floor while teachers said, “Girls can be mean sometimes,” as if cruelty was weather.
But you were not sixteen anymore.
Now quiet meant control.
Grant leaned closer. “Please. Not here.”
You looked at the reunion banner above his head. “Why not? Vanessa wanted an audience.”
Several people lowered their phones. A few raised them higher.
Vanessa’s cheeks burned red under her makeup. “You’re still dramatic. You always were.”
“You threw food at me in front of thirty people,” you said. “I placed a business card on a plate.”
“You walked in here pretending to be nobody.”
“No,” you said. “You decided I was nobody before I opened my mouth.”
That shut her up.
For one second, you saw the old cafeteria again. The long tables. The smell of pizza and floor cleaner. The microphone screeching when Vanessa tapped it with one painted nail. Your journal in her hand, opened to the page where you had written that someday you wanted to own buildings instead of being kicked out of them.
Back then, everyone laughed.
Tonight, no one did.
Grant rubbed a hand over his mouth. “Nora, our companies have mutual interests. Whatever happened years ago between you and Vanessa shouldn’t affect—”
“Your loan covenants?” you asked.
His eyes hardened.
That was when Vanessa finally understood this was not about a reunion. Not entirely.
You turned your body slightly, enough that your voice carried across the room. “Vale Properties is currently seeking a forty-two-million-dollar bridge investment to avoid default on three commercial redevelopment projects in downtown Cleveland, Columbus, and Pittsburgh.”
The room shifted.
Grant whispered, “Stop.”
You continued. “Bell Harbor Capital was approached as a potential emergency investor. Your husband’s team sent us financial statements, project timelines, lender notices, and a very interesting folder labeled ‘community relations risk.’”
Vanessa stared at Grant. “What default?”
Grant’s mouth opened. Nothing came out.
There it was.
The second beautiful thing.
Vanessa Vale, queen of diamonds and red silk, had not known her throne was on fire.
“You told me we were expanding,” she said.
“We are,” Grant snapped, but his voice cracked at the edge.
You looked at her. “He told you what you wanted to post.”
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