She Was Branded A Fake At The Gala — Then Agents Stormed In-heuh

The ballroom smelt of polished wood, warm wine, expensive perfume, and the sort of food that looked delicate enough to make everyone pretend they were not still hungry.

Diane Mercer stood beside her husband with one hand around a glass she had barely touched.

She had never liked rooms where people watched one another too carefully.

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This one was full of them.

The gala had been Rick’s idea, not hers.

He had called it important, the kind of evening where old connections were warmed up over linen napkins and quiet donations, where men in dark suits slapped one another’s backs and women judged dresses with smiles that never reached their eyes.

Diane had said yes because she wanted peace.

At fifty-eight, peace had become the thing she guarded most fiercely.

She had built a life around it.

A quiet kitchen in the morning.

A kettle clicking off.

A mug left cooling on the counter because Rick had forgotten it again.

A narrow hallway with coats hanging crookedly by the door.

A small back garden where rain collected on the paving stones and nothing worse than weeds waited in the corners.

After everything she had survived, ordinary life felt like a luxury.

So she had dressed plainly, smiled when introduced, and kept her answers short.

She had no interest in impressing anyone.

That was what Brent Callahan could not stand.

Brent had been circling her all evening.

He was Rick’s friend, though Diane had never understood why Rick used that word so generously for a man who treated kindness as weakness.

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