He Called Me the Help at My Own Company’s Gala-thuyhien

When Robert hissed, ‘Don’t do this here,’ I could actually smell the champagne on his breath.

That detail stayed with me later, long after the ballroom stopped spinning in my peripheral vision and long after the investors had gone home to their penthouses and town cars and carefully curated versions of the evening.

It was the smell of entitlement.

Dry, expensive, and stale underneath.

I did not answer him right away.

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I stepped around him.

The orchestra had faded to a low murmur.

The emcee was standing off to one side looking confused, still holding his cue cards.

Jessica remained near the foot of the stage in that red dress, one manicured hand pressed to her stomach, as if she could physically hold the moment together by refusing to move.

I took the microphone from the stand.

The feedback gave a small sharp cry through the ballroom speakers, and hundreds of conversations died at once.

For a second all I could hear was the faint clink of glassware and my own pulse.

Then I said, very clearly, ‘Good evening.

My name is Sarah Kensington.’

The room went still.

‘I am the majority owner of Kensington Group.’

A ripple moved through the crowd like wind over dark water.

Behind me, I heard Robert say my name again, softer this time, but there was no authority left in it.

I kept going.

‘And for anyone who was just introduced to me as the help, I apologize for the confusion.

I am, in fact, the person who signs off on the executive contracts in this company.

Including his.’

I did not point at Robert.

I didn’t need to.

Every eye in the ballroom found him on its own.

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