I stared at my phone while the screen faded back to black.
For three seconds, I considered calling Madison back. Then I remembered her smirk over the kitchen island, the way she watched me scrub and sweat like I was furniture that had learned to breathe.
Instead, I started my car.
The man I had called was named Victor Hale.
He wasn’t a gangster, a cop, or some mysterious ex-lover. He was my boss.
More specifically, he was the regional director of Hartwell Freight Systems, the company my mother had spent two years bragging about whenever she wanted to impress her church friends.
“My husband knows people in logistics,” she would say. “Our Emily does a little computer work for one of those companies.”
A little computer work.
What my parents did not know was that my “little computer work” involved managing contracts worth millions, supervising thirty-seven employees across four states, and recently negotiating the shipping account for a medical supply company that my father’s construction firm desperately wanted as a client.
They also did not know that Madison’s party had been planned on the same weekend I was supposed to host Victor and two senior executives for a private dinner. I had canceled that dinner because my mother guilted me into helping.
“You never show up for this family,” she had said on Thursday. “Madison only turns twenty-five once.”
So I showed up.
And after being humiliated in front of them, I made a simple call.
“Victor,” I had said from my car, “I’m sorry about tonight. I need to be honest. I canceled our dinner because my family demanded help with an event. They’ve now left me responsible for cooking and cleaning for fifty people, and I’m walking away before I lose my temper.”
Victor was quiet for a moment.
Then he said, “Emily, aren’t your parents Harold and Patricia Carter?”
“Yes.”
“And your father owns Carter & Sons Renovation?”
My stomach tightened. “Yes.”
Another pause.
“Interesting,” he said. “I’m currently five minutes from their address. Your father invited me to Madison’s party to discuss the MedSupply buildout.”
I almost laughed.
Of course Dad had invited him. Of course my parents had planned to parade Madison in front of him, while I served food in the background like hired help.
“I didn’t know,” I said.
“I believe you,” Victor replied. “Would you like me to leave?”
I looked back at the house through my rearview mirror.
“No,” I said. “Go inside.”
That was all.
I didn’t tell him to embarrass them. I didn’t ask him to defend me. I didn’t need revenge wrapped in theatrics.
All I did was allow the truth to arrive wearing a navy suit.
When I got back to my apartment, I had fifteen missed calls.
Mom. Dad. Madison. Mom again.
Then a text from Madison:
PLEASE ANSWER. MOM IS FREAKING OUT. DAD IS LOSING IT. VICTOR HALE KNOWS YOU???
I made tea.
At 6:42 p.m., Dad called from Madison’s phone.
I answered.
His voice was low and tight. “Emily. Where are you?”
“Home.”
“You need to come back immediately.”
“No.”
“Do you understand what you’ve done?”
I leaned against my kitchen counter. “I left a party.”
“You humiliated your mother.”
“No, Dad. She introduced me as unemployed help to my own boss. That was her choice.”
Silence.
Then he said, “Victor is asking questions.”
“Then answer them honestly.”
He exhaled hard. “This is not the time to be childish.”
“For once, I agree.”
I ended the call.
For the first time all weekend, my apartment was quiet.
But I knew my family.
Quiet never lasted long.
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