Victoria Humiliated a Stranger at the Gala—Then the Phone Connected-nhu9999 - Chainityai

Victoria Humiliated a Stranger at the Gala—Then the Phone Connected-nhu9999

Sterling Industries’ annual gala had always been more than a party. It was a performance. Every year, the company filled a ballroom with executives, investors, cameras, crystal, and enough champagne to make power look effortless.

Victoria Sterling had been raised inside that performance. Her father built the company, but Victoria inherited its language: the smile that meant warning, the compliment that meant dismissal, the silence that meant someone else should disappear.

People feared her without admitting they feared her. Assistants lowered their voices when she entered a room. Department heads rewrote presentations because Victoria hated being surprised. Board members called her “difficult” only when she was not present.

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The annual gala was supposed to prove Sterling Industries was untouchable. Crystal chandeliers glittered above polished marble floors. Champagne moved through the crowd like liquid gold, and every conversation sounded expensive enough to be protected by lawyers.

Three hundred executives, investors, and board members stood beneath those lights. They wore black tuxedos, silk gowns, diamond bracelets, and the comfortable expressions of people who believed consequences were a problem for smaller lives.

The woman in the navy dress did not fit the fantasy Victoria wanted projected. She arrived quietly, carrying a sleek black briefcase and speaking to almost no one. Her watch was expensive, but her entrance was controlled, not theatrical.

Several people noticed her. A few recognized the briefcase before they recognized the danger. It contained documents that had already been reviewed privately by the board’s emergency committee, though most guests in the ballroom did not know that yet.

Sterling Industries had been negotiating a multibillion-dollar rescue deal for months. The company looked strong from the outside, but inside, debt, misconduct claims, and a fragile merger timeline had turned every executive smile into a mask.

Victoria hated the deal. More precisely, she hated that anyone outside the Sterling family could place conditions on her. She had spent years treating the company as inheritance, stage, weapon, and personal kingdom.

The woman in the navy dress had been invited because the deal required one final observation period. Public behavior mattered. Governance mattered. So did whether the company’s future leadership could be trusted under pressure.

Nobody expected Victoria to create pressure herself.

The orchestra was playing low when Victoria saw the woman near the front tables. Witnesses later said Victoria stopped mid-sentence, stared for three seconds, and smiled in a way that made nearby executives look down at their glasses.

She crossed the marble floor with the certainty of someone used to being obeyed. The woman turned slightly, already aware of her approach. She did not back away. That seemed to irritate Victoria more than any insult could have.

“Get back where you belong,” Victoria said.

The sentence cut cleanly through the music. Several people heard it. Many pretended not to. The nearest camera, mounted for the official livestream, remained pointed toward the center of the ballroom.

Before anyone could soften the moment, Victoria grabbed a slice of chocolate cake from a dessert table. She lifted it with one manicured hand and slammed it directly into the woman’s face.

The impact was wet, ugly, and brutal. Frosting burst across the woman’s cheek, hair, and collar. Chocolate streaked down her navy dress and fell onto the marble in slow, thick drops.

The ballroom did not laugh.

That was the first thing people remembered afterward. Not the cake. Not the gasp. The absence of laughter. Everyone seemed to understand, all at once, that Victoria had not humiliated someone powerless.

She had detonated something worth billions.

Victoria grabbed the woman’s hair and pushed harder, grinding the cake against her face. The woman closed one eye against the frosting. Her body stiffened, but she did not raise her hands.

That restraint became its own accusation. She could have shoved Victoria. She could have screamed. For one sharp second, her fingers curled as if imagining the motion, then she forced them open again.

The table around them froze. Forks stopped halfway to mouths. Wineglasses hovered inches from lips. A waiter stood with a silver tray tilted in his hands while one napkin slid unnoticed to the floor.

One investor stared at the white roses in the centerpiece. Another looked at his wife instead of the assault. A board member lowered his eyes to his cuff links, as though polished metal could save him from witnessing.

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