The Gala Stool Was A Joke Until His Quiet Wife Opened Her Clutch-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Gala Stool Was A Joke Until His Quiet Wife Opened Her Clutch-nga9999

The ballroom smelled like white roses, candle wax, chilled champagne, and the kind of money that expected its own name to be pronounced correctly from a stage.

Vivienne Hart noticed the stool before anyone said a word.

It sat where her chair should have been, small and low and covered in dark velvet, tucked beneath her name card like someone had arranged a joke and waited for the room to laugh.

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For a moment, all she heard was the soft scrape of silverware and the polished murmur of donors greeting one another beneath the chandeliers.

Then the sound changed.

Conversations thinned.

Eyes moved.

People at the table saw the name card first, then the stool, then Vivienne.

Bennett Hart sat at the head of the table in his black tuxedo, his hand resting near his untouched water glass.

He looked composed.

Too composed.

Sloane sat beside him in diamonds that caught every bit of light in the room, although Vivienne already knew those diamonds had not been purchased with Sloane’s money.

They had moved through an account attached to a corporate card Sloane should never have had.

That was one of many things Bennett had forgotten a careful woman could trace.

Sloane tilted her head and smiled at Vivienne.

“I thought you’d prefer something less formal,” she said.

The insult was small enough to deny and public enough to wound.

That was Sloane’s specialty.

She never swung a hammer when a pin would do.

A trustee’s wife lowered her eyes to her salad.

A hospital board member coughed into his napkin.

Claire Hart, Bennett’s mother, sat two chairs down with her pearls resting perfectly at her throat and did not so much as blink.

Bennett did not stand.

He did not move the stool.

He did not tell Sloane to stop.

He looked at Vivienne as if she had arrived late to a performance he had already approved.

“Be graceful, Vivienne,” he said.

The word moved through her like cold air under a door.

Graceful.

That was what the Hart family had always demanded from her.

Graceful when they treated her education like decoration.

Graceful when they called her lucky.

Graceful when they spent money they believed Bennett had earned, never wondering why the family company had survived the year it should have collapsed.

Seven years earlier, Vivienne married Bennett Hart in a Park Avenue church with white flowers tied to the pews and photographers waiting outside.

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