Evelyn faced me again. “Fine,” she said, smiling too tightly. “Send it to my office. My assistant will handle it.”
I shook my head. “Payment is due tonight. The event is ending. We accept card, wire, or certified check.”
A few quiet gasps filled the room—the kind people make when drama becomes impossible to ignore.
Evelyn looked at me as if seeing me clearly for the first time. For years she had mistaken my silence for weakness. Now she realized she’d been wrong.
“Are you threatening me?” she whispered.
“I’m holding you accountable,” I said. “If you refuse to pay, I’ll treat this like any other unpaid event.”
Victoria narrowed her eyes. “Meaning?”
I answered in her place, because Evelyn clearly wasn’t going to. “Meaning collections. Legal action. And a notice sent to every vendor and venue in this city that she doesn’t pay her bills.”
That was the instant Evelyn’s confidence finally fractured. Not because of me—but because of what it could do to her reputation.
With forced composure, she reached into her purse and pulled out a black card.
But just then her phone buzzed. She glanced at the screen, and the color drained from her face.
“Ethan,” she murmured under her breath, reading the notification as if it were a threat. She looked back up at me, her eyes suddenly glossy—not with sadness, but with fury.
“You called him,” she accused.
“I didn’t have to,” I replied. “Someone else did.”
And at that moment, my husband stepped through the doorway, his jaw tight and his gaze locked on his mother.
Ethan didn’t rush in or raise his voice. He simply stood there in the private dining room entrance, surveying the scene: his mother with her frozen smile, her friends watching like spectators, the invoice lying on the table, my hand still resting beside it.
Maya must have texted him. I could tell. She had stayed neutral for years, but neutrality ends the moment someone starts mistreating your staff and abusing your business.
Evelyn’s voice instantly turned sugary. “Ethan! Darling, you’re here. Tell Claire this has gotten out of hand.”
Ethan glanced at me. “Is that true?” he asked.
I could have unloaded every insult she’d ever thrown at me—every “little servant” joke, every condescending remark, every time she treated the restaurant like her personal stage. Instead, I kept it simple.
“She hosted two events. She hasn’t paid for either. And tonight she told everyone she ‘practically owns’ the place.”
Evelyn laughed sharply. “It was a joke. Everyone knew I was teasing.”
Ethan didn’t look at the guests. His eyes dropped to the invoice.
“How much?” he asked.
“Forty-eight thousand for tonight,” I said. “The earlier event was twelve.”
Evelyn snapped toward me. “You added the other one!”
“I didn’t add anything,” I replied calmly. “It’s a separate invoice. Still unpaid.”
A ripple of murmurs moved through the room. Guests shifted in their seats, suddenly aware of their own reputations.
Victoria Sloan set the invoice back down neatly. “Evelyn,” she said coolly, “if this is accurate, it’s unacceptable. Venues talk. People talk.”
Now panic flashed across Evelyn’s face. She grabbed the card again. “Fine. Charge it. I’m not—”
Ethan stepped forward. “Stop.”
He wasn’t speaking to me.
He was speaking to her.
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