The Quiet Daughter at the Table Owned the Deal They Stole-Tep

“I’m the new partner,” Julian said, leaning back in the leather chair like the room had been built for the exact size of his ego.

The mahogany table shone beneath the recessed lights, slick with polish and cold enough to reflect every face around it.

My mother’s fingers were still wrapped around my upper arm.

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Not gently.

Not accidentally.

Hard enough that I could feel each nail through the sleeve of my black dress.

“Stand over there, Elena,” she whispered through a smile. “Pour the water and stay quiet.”

She did not look angry to anyone else.

That was one of her gifts.

She could humiliate you with the same face she used for charity luncheons and holiday photos.

The boardroom smelled like lemon polish, strong coffee, and cold air-conditioning.

Somewhere beneath it, I could smell the metal tang of the pitcher sweating in my hand.

The glass was slick with condensation.

My palm tightened around it anyway.

Mom steered me toward the credenza along the far wall, where crystal glasses sat beside a silver tray and a stack of paper napkins folded into perfect squares.

“Do not ruin this,” she murmured. “Your brother has worked too hard.”

I almost laughed at that.

Julian had never worked hard at anything except making failure look like someone else’s fault.

But I did not laugh.

I had learned a long time ago that in my family, reacting was treated as proof of guilt.

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