CEO Protected A Caterer From Her Fiancé — Then His Daughter Became The Target-felicia

Victoria Langston stepped back onto the stage with my name still in her mouth, and the entire ballroom leaned toward her like one living thing.

The microphone made a soft click against her ringless hand. The donor screen behind her still showed the Mercer acquisition header, bright enough to turn Grant’s face gray-blue under the lights. His mother had risen halfway from her chair, pearls tight around her throat, one hand braced on the tablecloth.

Victoria looked first at the cameras, then at the guests, then at me.

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“Mr. Hayes is not a prop,” she said.

No one laughed that time.

My phone buzzed again in my palm. The babysitter’s message sat there like a nail driven through glass.

Daniel, someone from the news is outside your apartment.

I could picture the hallway before I saw it: the scratched brown door, Lily’s rain boots lined up beside the mat, the paper star she had taped above the peephole because she said our apartment needed a sign of luck. My thumb hovered over the screen, but my hand had started shaking too badly to type.

Victoria saw it.

She covered the microphone with one hand and turned her body just enough to block the nearest camera from my face.

“Is your daughter home?” she asked.

I nodded once.

“With a sitter.”

Her eyes shifted, sharp and immediate. Not pity. Calculation.

She faced her assistant at the side of the stage. “Call my security director. Now.”

Grant gave a small laugh, but it came out dry.

“Victoria, this is getting theatrical.”

She did not look at him.

“Also call building management at Daniel Hayes’s address. No press beyond the lobby. No strangers on his floor. If anyone refuses, have legal issue trespass notices before 9:05.”

The room changed temperature.

I felt it before I understood it. The mockery drained out first. Then the whispers thinned. Phones lowered a few inches. Men who had smiled at Grant ten minutes earlier suddenly found their water glasses interesting.

Grant’s mother stood fully.

“You cannot use company security for a waiter.”

Victoria’s head turned slowly.

“Caterer,” she said. “And watch your mouth.”

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