“Fair?” I repeated. “Your mother told an entire salon that I was unworthy of wearing white because I don’t have parents. I stood there while strangers looked at me like a charity case in couture, and your concern is fairness?”

He set down his glass. “You know how my family is.”

“Yes. I do.”

He stepped closer. “She’s obsessed with appearances. It doesn’t excuse it, but it explains it. She’s been under a lot of pressure with the wedding and the guest list and my father’s firm and—”

“Stop.”

He did.

“I will not spend the rest of my life translating cruelty into stress so that powerful people can remain comfortable.”

His mouth tightened. “I came here to make this right.”

“No,” I said. “You came here to make this survivable.”

Something passed between us then. Something brittle. The first crack through glass before the whole pane gives way.

He looked away first.

“She’ll apologize,” he said. “I’ll talk to her. Tomorrow. We’ll all calm down. This doesn’t have to become a catastrophe.”

There was the wordless plea inside that sentence. Not because he loved me enough to fight for me, but because he feared consequences he could sense without yet understanding.

I studied him for a long moment.

Then I nodded once.

“Go home, Derek.”

He looked relieved too fast. “Vivian—”

“Go home. Sleep. We can talk tomorrow.”

It was the most mercy I could offer him.

He left close to midnight. I listened to the apartment grow quiet again after the soft click of the door.

Then I walked to the office at the far end of the hall, shut the glass doors behind me, and sat before the long black desk where I had signed agreements that changed the shape of industries.

The city glittered beyond the windows. Midtown pulsed with light. Somewhere below, people were hailing cabs, finishing late dinners, coming home to spouses, leaving lovers, stealing moments, losing fortunes, making them. Manhattan had no patience for private heartbreak. It simply kept shining.

I opened my laptop.

The secure server loaded with a touch and retinal scan. My inbox populated in layered columns. Asia had already begun to send overnight numbers. London would be awake soon. Tokyo had questions about a manufacturing carveout. São Paulo needed revised debt assumptions before market open. None of that felt as immediate as the item I clicked.

Whitmore & Associates — International Expansion / ACP Merger.

The file opened on my screen.