The Restaurant Tablet Exposed Who Tried To Steal Rebecca’s Company Account That Night-QuynhTranJP

Diane’s polished nail stayed on the $12,400 check like she could hold the room in place by touching paper.

The attorney did not raise his voice. That made it worse for her.

He stood beside my chair in his charcoal coat, tablet angled toward Mark, two printed packets tucked under his left arm. The black screen reflected candlelight across his glasses. Behind him, the restaurant manager kept one hand folded over the other, face blank in the way employees look when they have already been told not to interfere.

Image

Mark lowered his wineglass so slowly the base tapped the table twice.

Diane looked at the tablet, then at me.

‘You brought a lawyer to dinner?’

I picked up my water glass. My fingers left pale half-moons in the condensation.

‘No,’ I said. ‘I brought my company attorney to an attempted account takeover.’

One investor shifted in his chair. The leather creaked. Someone’s fork slid off a plate and landed on the carpet with a soft thud. No one bent to pick it up.

Mark’s face changed by inches, not all at once. First his mouth tightened. Then the red at his collar climbed over his jaw. Then his eyes moved to his mother’s hand on the bill tray.

‘Diane,’ he said, barely above breath.

She smiled at him without looking away from the screen.

‘This is a misunderstanding.’

The attorney placed the printed packets on the table. He did it neatly, one in front of Mark, one in front of Diane. Both covers had the company letterhead at the top. Rebecca Vale Consulting, LLC. My name, not his. My registered office. My tax ID. My signature on the formation documents from six years earlier.

Diane did not touch her packet.

Mark did.

His thumb dragged across the first page, leaving a faint grease mark from the steak knife he had been holding.

‘What is this?’

‘The access log,’ the attorney said. ‘The bank sent it at 4:26 p.m. Your mother requested administrative control this morning using a forged board authorization.’

The private room seemed to shrink around the table.

At the far end, one of the investors leaned back and took his glasses off. He folded them once, twice, then set them beside his untouched dessert spoon.

Diane laughed softly.

It was the same laugh she used when I mispronounced a wine region three years earlier. The same laugh she used when I wore flats to Mark’s promotion party because my ankle was swollen. The same laugh that told everyone there was no emergency, only Rebecca being difficult again.

‘Forgery is a dramatic word,’ she said.

The attorney swiped to the third page.

A signature filled the screen.

Diane Vale.

Below it was the name she had typed as witness.

Mark Vale.

Mark stared at it. His lips parted. Nothing came out.

I watched him understand the shape of the trap. Not the one Diane had set for me. The one she had set for him, too.

She had used his name because she believed he would protect her before he protected the truth.

She had been right for years.

The restaurant manager cleared his throat once.

‘Mrs. Vale,’ he said to me, not Diane, ‘per your earlier instruction, Harbor & Vine has paused the private event billing until ownership of the payment method is clarified.’

Read More