She Let Him Steal the Room Until Page Four Took His Name Away-QuynhTranJP

The lead investor’s fingers closed around my pen.

Daniel’s gold watch kept ticking, loud enough for me to hear over the soft jazz drifting from the restaurant speakers. Vanessa’s bracelet had stopped scraping the table. The candle between us burned low, melting wax into a clear pool beside Daniel’s untouched wine.

Nobody moved until the investor turned page four again.

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Then he looked at Daniel.

“Mr. Carter,” he said, “why is your wife listed as sole founder and controlling owner?”

Daniel blinked once.

His mouth worked like he had bitten into something sharp.

“Administrative structure,” he said. “Old paperwork.”

My attorney, Rachel Monroe, placed another folder on the table. She did not sit. Her black coat was still buttoned, and rain darkened one shoulder where she had walked in from the street.

“Not old,” Rachel said. “Current. Filed. Verified. And updated this afternoon.”

Daniel turned to me with that controlled little smile he used when a waiter brought the wrong wine.

“Emily, tell them this is a misunderstanding.”

I reached for my water glass and took one sip. The ice had melted. The water tasted faintly of lemon and silver.

Vanessa pulled her hand back from the pen as if the metal had turned hot.

The general manager, Luis, stood by the door with the black master key card held flat against his chest. He had worked for me since the first location, back when the dish pit flooded twice a week and Daniel still called our suppliers by the wrong names.

Daniel pointed at him.

“Luis, get back to the floor.”

Luis did not move.

That was the first crack everyone saw.

Daniel’s authority had always depended on people obeying before they looked for proof.

At 8:23 p.m., proof was sitting in five folders on a white tablecloth.

Rachel opened the top one and slid out a single sheet.

“Your signing authority was conditional,” she said. “It required board consent for contracts over $500,000, new equity agreements, management appointments, or vendor changes involving related parties.”

One of the investors leaned forward.

“Related parties?”

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