The Cheap Dress, The Broken Necklace, And The Boss Who Froze-Tien3004

The Harrison Estate ballroom had been built to make ordinary people feel temporary.

The ceilings were too high.

The marble was too polished.

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The chandeliers threw light over everyone like a judgment, turning diamond earrings and watch faces into little flashes of proof that some people belonged there and some people were only allowed to pass through.

Claire Brooks felt that judgment before her husband said a word.

She stood near the valet stand in a plain navy dress she had ironed herself on the edge of their bed, pressing the fabric until the bedroom smelled like steam and warm cotton.

It was not expensive.

It was not designer.

It had one tiny repaired seam near her hip, stitched by hand that afternoon after she noticed the thread pulling loose.

But it was clean, it fit her, and for one small hour while she got ready, Claire had thought maybe that would be enough.

Then Ethan looked at her.

He did not look angry at first.

That almost made it worse.

He looked disappointed, like she was a detail on a business proposal that somebody had failed to correct before the meeting.

The young valet took the keys to Ethan’s imported sports car, and Ethan waited until the man stepped away before he leaned closer.

“Please, Claire,” he said under his breath, adjusting the gold watch he always touched when he wanted to seem important. “Tonight decides everything.”

“I know,” Claire said.

She tried to smile because she had promised herself she would not let him embarrass her before they even got inside.

“That’s why I came,” she said. “To stand beside you.”

Ethan’s mouth twitched.

It was not a smile.

“Fifty investors are in there,” he said. “Board members. Politicians. My direct boss.”

“I understand.”

“No,” he said softly. “You don’t. That dress makes you look like hired staff.”

The air had a bite to it even though it was a warm night.

Claire heard a car door close behind her.

She heard distant laughter from the entrance and the quiet rush of the fountain near the estate drive.

Then she heard the sentence that settled on her like a hand around her throat.

“Honestly,” Ethan said, “it’s humiliating.”

The first time he had used that word about her, Claire had cried in the bathroom for twenty minutes and told herself he was stressed.

The second time, she had gone quiet.

After that, she had started learning all the small ways a person can disappear while still standing beside someone.

Ethan had not been like that when they met.

Back then, he came into the downtown clinic where she worked filing medical records, and he seemed charmed by the fact that she kept crackers in her desk drawer and used her lunch break to call Miss Helen.

He said Claire was real.

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