When The Gala Host Read Elena’s Real Title, Julian’s $92 Million Smile Collapsed-eirian

The host read my full name into the microphone, and for three seconds, Julian Torres kept smiling because his face had not received the message yet.

His champagne glass stayed halfway to his mouth. Vanessa Rizzi’s red nails remained hooked around his sleeve. The cameras kept flashing from the press line, catching the exact shape of his confidence before it cracked.

Then the title landed.

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Chairwoman. Majority Chair of Aurora Continental Group.

A banker near the front turned first. Then a city councilman. Then two board members from Torres Nexus who had spent the last hour laughing too loudly at Julian’s jokes. The room shifted in layers, like expensive fabric being pulled off furniture.

Julian lowered the glass one inch.

Across the ballroom, Sebastian Reed stepped onto the stage with the sealed navy folder held against his chest. He did not look at Julian. That was the first visible wound.

The host cleared his throat and moved aside.

“Elena Vega Torres,” he repeated, this time without the prepared gala warmth. “Chairwoman of Aurora Continental Group.”

I walked past the back row where Julian had planned to hide me if I had shown up begging. The carpet softened every step. The air smelled of champagne, white roses, floor polish, and hot camera bulbs. My left earring brushed my neck. Under my ring finger, a thin crescent of garden dirt still marked the edge of one nail.

Julian saw it when I passed him.

His eyes dropped to my hand, then to the folder, then back to my face.

“Elena,” he said, but the microphone caught it.

It came out smaller than my name had ever sounded in his mouth.

Vanessa’s hand slid off his sleeve.

I reached the podium. Sebastian opened the folder and placed three documents in front of me with the precision of a man laying down surgical instruments.

The first page was the voting agreement.

The second was the rescue capital authorization.

The third was the emergency governance clause Julian had signed five years earlier without reading the final paragraph because he had been too busy telling me to make coffee for his investors.

Sebastian adjusted the microphone.

I looked at Julian.

He shook his head once, fast and almost invisible.

Do not.

That was what his face said.

For five years, Julian had built a monument out of money he thought belonged to faceless investors. He had polished his shoes with it, bought tables with it, paid consultants with it, charmed donors with it, and told himself the woman in the garden was lucky to share his last name.

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