Chloe Kensington stared at the card as if the sleek, embossed letters had miraculously rearranged themselves into a death threat. For the first time all evening, her perfectly glossed mouth stopped moving. The heavy diamond tennis bracelet on her wrist caught the amber light of the ballroom’s crystal chandelier, but her hand had gone completely, unnaturally still above the greasy paper plate she had just shoved into my chest.
I watched her read the name once. Then twice. Then a third time, her eyes tracing the syllables as if trying to decipher an ancient, terrifying language.
Eleanor Vance Founder & CEO Vance Vanguard Capital
Behind her, Preston Kensington finally looked up from his phone.
At first, he only looked annoyed, carrying the distinct irritation of a man who believed his time was the most valuable commodity in any room. Then his eyes landed on the card sitting amidst a smear of barbecue sauce and a lump of cold potato salad. Every trace of color drained from his face, leaving his skin the shade of wet ash.
“Chloe,” he said quietly, a warning wrapped in a whisper.
She did not answer him. Her practiced, pageant-ready smile was still trying to survive on her face out of sheer muscle memory, but it had turned crooked, weak, and deeply confused. The same woman who had once stood in the center of our high school cafeteria and read my private journal into a stolen microphone now looked like she needed someone to explain the alphabet to her.
“You?” she whispered, her voice barely carrying over the ambient hum of the string quartet playing in the corner.
I folded my hands in front of me, perfectly calm. “Thirty seconds.”
Preston stepped forward so fast his polished Italian leather shoes nearly slipped on the spilled potato salad dotting the parquet floor. He snatched the card from the plate, stared at it, and then slowly raised his eyes to mine. His face changed in a way the entire room noticed. It wasn’t fear, exactly. It was something much deeper, something feral.
Recognition.
“Eleanor Vance,” he said, almost choking on the syllables of my name.
The smartphones in the room shifted direction. A few people who had been enthusiastically filming me for entertainment—eager to capture the pathetic outcast getting humiliated by the prom queen once again—were suddenly filming Chloe for evidence. The cruel laughter that had bubbled up just moments ago thinned out, replaced by a low, buzzing murmur of confusion.
Chloe turned to her husband, her brow furrowed. “Preston, what is happening?”
He did not look at her. That was the first truly beautiful thing that happened that night. He kept looking at me, staring with the wide-eyed intensity of a desperate man staring at a locked fire exit while the building burns down around him.
“Eleanor,” he said, forcing a charismatic smile that died long before it reached his eyes. “I had no idea you were attending the reunion tonight.”
“You didn’t ask,” I said, my voice smooth and flat.
Chloe blinked, looking between us. “Wait. You two know each other?”
Preston swallowed audibly. His bespoke tuxedo suddenly looked two sizes too small, the collar practically strangling him.
“We’ve been trying to schedule a meeting with Ms. Vance for three months,” he said.
That sentence landed harder than any physical strike ever could.
The whole ballroom went dead silent. The string quartet seemed to realize the shift in gravity and abruptly stopped playing mid-measure. Chloe’s sycophantic circle of friends stopped smiling. Someone near the towering champagne fountain whispered, “Wait, that Eleanor Vance?” Another voice, hushed but echoing in the quiet, answered, “Vance Vanguard? The private equity firm in Manhattan?”
I did not turn around to acknowledge them. I kept my eyes locked entirely on Chloe, because this moment belonged to the two of us. She had built this stage ten years ago with every laugh, every shove in the hallway, every vicious whisper, every tear-stained page of my journal she had turned into a public spectacle.
Now, she had to stand inside the house she built.
Preston took another cautious step toward me, holding his hands up placatingly. “Ms. Vance, tonight was supposed to be strictly informal. A casual gathering. If I had known—”
“If you had known,” I interrupted, my voice cutting through the heavy air like a scalpel, “you would have told your wife not to throw her leftovers at me?”
His jaw tightened, a muscle ticking violently in his cheek.
But my eyes never left Chloe. Slowly, deliberately, I reached inside the pocket of my tailored cashmere coat. My fingers closed around a slim, pristine white envelope. It was plain. Unmarked. It was the exact kind of envelope that made powerful men sweat through their expensive suits because it didn’t need any decoration to prove how dangerous it was.
As I pulled it out, Preston recognized the heavy, watermarked paper immediately, and his eyes widened in sheer terror.
“Ms. Vance,” Preston said, dropping his voice to a frantic, guttural octave. “Please. Can we discuss this privately? In the hall? Anywhere else?”
Chloe laughed once, a harsh, overly loud sound that betrayed her mounting panic. “Discuss what privately? Preston, stop acting like she matters! It’s Eleanor. She’s nobody.”
He turned on her so fast she actually stumbled a half-step backward, her heels wobbling on the slick floor.
“Chloe,” he hissed, venom dripping from the word, “shut your mouth.”
The room heard it.
And Chloe heard something far worse than anger in her husband’s voice. She heard blind, absolute panic.
I let the silence stretch out, thick and suffocating. I wanted her to feel every agonizing millisecond of it. Not because I was inherently cruel, but because she had spent her entire life mistaking my quietness for weakness, and I had spent the last ten years learning the fundamental difference between the two.
When I was sixteen, being quiet meant survival. It meant keeping my head down while girls like Chloe filmed me crying by the lockers. It meant scrubbing my own name, written in derogatory red lipstick, off the bathroom mirrors before the janitor could see it. It meant picking the wet, crumpled pages of my most private thoughts off the linoleum floor while the faculty turned a blind eye.
But I was not sixteen anymore. Now, quiet meant control.
Preston leaned closer, his breath smelling of stale whiskey and mints. “Please. Don’t do this here.”
I looked up at the glittering reunion banner suspended above his head. Class of 2016 – Sponsored by Kensington Estates. “Why not?” I asked lightly. “Chloe wanted an audience. She always wants an audience.”
Several people lowered their phones, suddenly feeling the icy chill of the room. A few others, smelling blood in the water, raised their cameras higher.
Chloe’s cheeks burned crimson under her flawless contour. “You’re still so dramatic. You always were playing the victim.”
“You threw food at me in front of fifty people,” I stated simply. “I placed a business card on a plate.”
“You walked in here pretending to be a nobody, trying to trick us!”
“No,” I corrected her, my tone unwavering. “You decided I was a nobody before I even opened my mouth.”
That finally shut her up.
I turned my body just slightly, angling myself so my voice would carry across the entire ballroom without me having to raise it. “Kensington Estates is currently seeking a forty-two-million-dollar mezzanine bridge investment to avoid total default on three major commercial redevelopment projects in downtown Chicago, Boston, and Philadelphia.”
The room collectively inhaled. The shift in atmospheric pressure was palpable.
Preston whispered, “Stop. I am begging you.”
I did not stop. “Vance Vanguard Capital was approached as a potential emergency lifeline. Your husband’s executive team sent my analysts your internal financial statements, your delayed project timelines, your desperate lender notices, and a very interesting, highly classified folder labeled ‘Community Relations Risk.’”
Chloe stared at Preston, her lips trembling. “What default? Preston, what is she talking about?”
Preston’s mouth opened, but only a dry, rattling sound came out.
There it was. The second beautiful thing.
Chloe Kensington, queen of diamonds and red silk, had absolutely no idea that her glorious throne was currently engulfed in flames.
“You told me we were expanding into new markets,” she said, her voice cracking.
“We are,” Preston snapped, though he couldn’t maintain eye contact with her.
I looked at her with something bordering on pity. “He told you what you wanted to post on your Instagram.”
Someone in the crowd gasped. Chloe’s manicured fingers curled around her designer clutch so tightly her knuckles turned a stark, bone-white. Her old friends looked at each other, their expressions calculating. They had spent the entire evening admiring her rented confidence, her sponsored banners, her champagne-soaked speeches about generational wealth. Now, I could practically see them doing the math in their heads, quietly subtracting the diamonds from the crippling debt.
Chloe tried to recover, lifting her chin in a desperate bid for dignity. “Business has ups and downs. Everyone knows that. That doesn’t make you important, Eleanor.”
I almost admired her sheer, stubborn dedication to denial.
“No,” I agreed. “But ownership does.”
Preston closed his eyes in defeat.
I opened the pristine envelope and slowly withdrew a single document. I did not hand it to her. I held it up just high enough where she, and the front row of onlookers, could clearly read the bold, capitalized heading.
NOTICE OF CONDITIONAL ACQUISITION REVIEW
Chloe stared at it, her comprehension lagging behind the reality of the words. “What is that?” she whispered.
I looked directly into her terrified eyes. “Your husband begged my company to rescue Kensington Estates. Yesterday afternoon, I officially declined the rescue.”
Preston’s face twisted in agony. “Eleanor, we were still negotiating the terms!”
“No,” I said coldly. “You were begging. And I was verifying.”
The truth hung heavily in the air. For years, Chloe had wielded money as a weapon, treating it as undeniable proof of her superiority. Now, money had walked into the room wearing my face, and it refused to bow to her. But my revenge was not just about the refusal; it was about the reason. I reached into the envelope again, my fingers brushing against the second document—the one that would truly burn her kingdom to the ground.
Preston lowered his voice to a desperate, raspy plea. “Ms. Vance, I truly believe there has been a catastrophic misunderstanding between our teams.”
“There hasn’t,” I replied, my voice echoing in the quiet ballroom. “Your company wanted a cash injection. My team wanted the truth. Unfortunately, the truth was buried under grossly inflated property appraisals, millions in delayed contractor payments, and hundreds of tenant displacement complaints you conveniently forgot to mention until my forensic accountants dug them up.”
Chloe’s eyes narrowed, confusion battling with rising anger. “Tenant what?”
I turned to her. “People, Chloe. Families. Small business owners. Elderly residents on fixed incomes. The kind of people your husband’s firm probably refers to as ‘obstacles’ when they can’t afford his predatory rent increases.”
Her face hardened, a flash of the old high school bully surfacing. “You don’t know a damn thing about what we do or how real estate works.”
“I know enough,” I countered. “I know one of your downtown Chicago projects forcefully pushed out a family-owned bakery that had been a neighborhood staple for thirty-six years. I know a veterans’ medical clinic had to relocate to the suburbs after your company tripled their lease overnight. I know your husband’s legal team internally referred to it as a ‘necessary market correction.’”
Preston pointed a shaking finger at me. “Careful, Eleanor. You are stepping onto very thin ice.”
I smiled then. Not a big smile. Not a cruel one. Just enough to show him I held the hammer to his glass house.
“Preston,” I said softly, “you are standing in a ballroom surrounded by fifty recording smartphones, publicly threatening the woman your senior lenders are waiting to hear from at eight o’clock tomorrow morning.”
His finger dropped as if it had been severed.
Chloe looked around, finally noticing the sea of glowing screens pointing at her. Her friends were no longer filming for mockery. They were filming a documentary of her demise, and she was the tragic villain.
She took a step toward me, her voice trembling with rage. “You planned this. You orchestrated this whole thing.”
“You planned the humiliation with the plate of food,” I reminded her. “I simply planned for the possibility that you hadn’t evolved.”
That struck deeper than I expected. For half a second, something vulnerable flickered across her perfectly powdered face. Not regret. Not yet. But perhaps the sheer terror of being seen clearly, stripped of her armor.
But then Chloe did what Chloe had always done when cornered. She attacked.
“You think a bank account makes you better than me now?” she spat, her voice shrill and echoing off the vaulted ceiling. “You think a fancy title and a tailored coat erase what you were? You were pathetic in high school, Eleanor. Everyone knew it! You were dirty, you were poor, and you were always begging to be noticed!”
The room went perfectly still.
There it was. The old, familiar voice. The old knife twisting in the dark. The core version of her that had never disappeared, but had merely learned to camouflage itself in better jewelry and philanthropic galas.
I felt the ghost of the old pain rise in my chest, a tight, suffocating knot. But it did not own me anymore. It knocked at the door, but I did not let it in.
“You’re right,” I said.
Chloe blinked, completely derailed by the agreement.
I nodded slowly, letting the truth breathe. “I wanted to be noticed. I wanted just one person to notice I was drowning after my mother died of cancer. I wanted someone to tell me I wasn’t disgusting because my shoes had holes in them, or because my lunch came from the discount food bank. I wanted a teacher to step in and stop you when you read my deepest, darkest thoughts to the whole cafeteria. I wanted my father to be sober enough to pick up the phone when I called him crying from the nurse’s office.”
Nobody moved. Nobody breathed.
My voice did not shake. That surprised even me.
“I was a desperately lonely kid,” I said, locking eyes with her. “And you made my loneliness your favorite form of entertainment.”
Chloe’s mouth opened, but no sound emerged.
I stepped closer, lowering my voice just enough to force her to lean in, to make her truly listen. “But here is what you never, ever understood, Chloe. You didn’t destroy me. You trained me.”
Her eyes flashed with fear.
“You taught me how rooms work,” I continued, sweeping my gaze across the silent crowd. “I learned who laughs because they genuinely agree. Who laughs because they are terrified of being the next target. Who stays silent because cruelty somehow benefits their social standing. Who pretends to look at their phones because stepping in would cost them their comfort.”
A man near the back of the room lowered his head. A woman who had once tripped me during gym class wiped a stray tear from her cheek.
“You taught me how to read power,” I said, turning my gaze back to Chloe. “And I learned it much better than you did.”
Chloe swallowed hard.
Preston interjected, his voice trembling. “This is completely unnecessary. This is a business matter.”
I turned to him, my expression turning to stone. “No, Preston. What was unnecessary was your company asking my firm for forty-two million dollars while actively hiding the fact that your wife’s nonprofit foundation was being used as a slush fund to polish your public image before executing mass layoffs and illegal evictions.”
Chloe’s head whipped toward him, her hair flying. “What?”
Preston’s expression shattered. He looked too quick, too guilty.
“You told me the Kensington Future Leaders Foundation was exclusively for inner-city scholarships,” Chloe said, her voice dropping to a horrified whisper.
Preston’s jaw locked. “It is.”
I looked at him, feeling a cold surge of absolute victory. “Partly.”
I reached into the envelope and pulled out the second document. This one was thicker, marked with highlighter, showing wire transfer dates, phantom vendor names, and exorbitant sponsorship invoices. I held it out to Chloe. Not because I thought she deserved mercy, but because the truth should always be planted where the lies grew. As she reached for it, Preston lunged forward, his hands curling into claws as he grabbed her wrist, desperate to pull the papers away.
“Give me that!” Preston snarled, his fingers digging into Chloe’s skin.
“Don’t touch me!” she screamed, jerking her arm back with a violent twist.
The crowd erupted into shocked gasps. Two waiters near the buffet table dropped their trays, the clatter of silverware ringing out like alarm bells.
I stepped back, allowing gravity to do the work. I answered the question Chloe had asked moments before. “Millions of dollars donated to your foundation were illegally routed through event vendors directly connected to Kensington Estates. Inflated invoices. Bogus consulting fees. Fake charity gala sponsorships. Your name was useful, Chloe, because the public still believes that pretty women hosting charity dinners are harmless.”
Chloe looked up at the massive banner hanging from the ceiling. Sponsored by Kensington Estates. For the first time in her life, she looked incredibly small beneath it.
Preston’s voice turned utterly glacial. “You do not have the legal authority to make these defamatory accusations.”
“I have the banking documentation,” I replied smoothly. “The legal authority is what arrives at your office tomorrow.”
Chloe clutched the papers to her chest, the edges crinkling in her grip. “You used my foundation? You forged my signatures?”
Preston snapped, his mask completely gone. “I protected us, Chloe! I kept this lifestyle afloat!”
“Us?” she laughed, a hysterical, broken sound. “You mean you protected yourself.”
He lowered his voice, but the entire room was hanging onto every word. “Do not start this here. You are making a scene.”
She looked at him as if he were a stranger who had just broken into her home. That was when I realized the profound difference between them. Chloe was cruel. Chloe was a bully. But Preston was a predator. Chloe had built her identity around dominating high school hallways and country club luncheons. Preston had built his entire life around exploiting vulnerable people and using his wife as a human shield.
He looked around, his eyes calculating the damage. Then, he tried one last, desperate pivot. He turned toward the crowd, forcing a chuckle that sounded like grinding glass.
“Listen to us,” Preston said loudly, projecting to the room. “I apologize, everyone. I’m sorry my wife’s little practical joke upset Eleanor. Clearly, old high school wounds run deep. This is just an emotional overreaction.”
There it was. The classic playbook. Make the woman look hysterical. Make his wife look silly. Make himself look like the calm, reasonable victim.
I felt the old room watching me again, waiting to see if I would crumble under the gaslighting. Instead, I let out a single, clean, genuinely amused laugh.
Preston’s smile faltered.
“You really thought that would work?” I asked.
He spread his hands in mock innocence. “Everyone here saw what happened. Chloe made a tasteless joke. You turned it into a hostile corporate attack because you’re still holding onto some teenage resentment.”
Several people in the crowd shifted uneasily, looking uncertain. That was the danger of men like Preston. They knew exactly how to give cowards a comfortable place to hide.
I looked around the room. At the classmates who had laughed at me then, and laughed at me tonight. At the ones who filmed because my pain was just content. Then, my gaze landed on Mrs. Gable. She had been my junior year English teacher. The one adult who had watched Chloe hold my stolen journal up in the air and had merely said, “Return that, please, Chloe,” as if the public dissection of a grieving child’s soul was a minor dress code violation.
Mrs. Gable sat near the back, her gray hair pulled into a tight bun, her hands folded rigidly on the table. She refused to meet my eyes.
I turned back to Preston. “You want witnesses? Fine.”
I faced the ballroom.
“Who remembers the cafeteria?” I asked, my voice ringing clear.
No one spoke. Chloe’s breathing quickened.
I waited. I let the silence become unbearable.
A man named Jackson shifted near the open bar. He had been the captain of the varsity football team, loud, boisterous, always providing the booming laugh whenever Chloe needed background noise for her cruelty. Now, he wore a simple wedding band and looked like a tired father who probably told his daughters to be kind to the quiet kids.
I looked directly at him. “Jackson?”
His face flushed a deep, painful red.
Preston seized the hesitation. “This is childish! We are leaving.”
Jackson cleared his throat, his voice rough. “I remember.”
Every head snapped toward him.
Chloe stared at him, betrayed. “Jackson, don’t.”
He wouldn’t look at her. He kept his eyes on me. “I remember the journal. I remember what she read.”
The room changed. The dam broke. One truth suddenly gave permission for another.
A woman named Harper slowly raised her hand, looking exactly like the terrified teenager she used to be. “I remember the milk. When she poured it in your backpack.”
Someone else from the back called out, “The writing on the bathroom mirror.”
Another voice, small and filled with shame, added, “The video in the locker room.”
Chloe looked frantically around the room as her old kingdom turned on her, betraying her one guilty memory at a time. I didn’t enjoy their newfound courage. Not fully. Because courage that arrives ten years late still leaves a child bleeding alone when she needs a tourniquet the most. But I accepted it.
I nodded once. “Thank you.”
Jackson looked miserable. “Eleanor, I am so sorry.”
That nearly broke something deep inside my ribcage. Because a part of me had waited three thousand, six hundred and fifty days to hear just one person say those words without being forced by a guidance counselor.
I swallowed the lump in my throat. “I know.”
Preston checked his phone. His thumb flew across the screen, frantic.
I noticed. “Who are you texting?”
“My attorneys,” he spat.
I smiled, pulling my own phone from my pocket and turning the screen around for him to see. One message sat there, sent to my general counsel twenty minutes ago.
Proceed with packet delivery tomorrow at 8:00 a.m. EST. Include the primary lender group, the State Attorney General’s office, and the Kensington Foundation Board of Directors.
Preston stared at the glowing screen. The blood drained completely from his lips.
“You wouldn’t,” he whispered.
“You keep saying that like you actually know me,” I replied.
Suddenly, Preston’s phone vibrated violently in his hand. The screen illuminated with a caller ID that made him physically sway. It was Richard, the head of his primary lending group.
Because Harper, standing near the front, had been broadcasting the entire confrontation on Facebook Live.
Preston answered with shaking fingers, putting the phone to his ear. “Richard, listen to me—”
The voice on the other end was so loud and furious it bled through the speaker, echoing into the silent ballroom. “Is Eleanor Vance standing right in front of you?”
Preston closed his eyes, the phone trembling violently against his ear. The voice of his senior lender at First Fidelity Bancorp was so loud and furious it bled through the speaker, echoing into the deathly silent ballroom. The sophisticated mask of the powerful real estate mogul had entirely melted away. In his bespoke tuxedo, Preston now looked like nothing more than a terrified, cornered animal.
I walked past his panicked stammering, stopping at the table where the greasy paper plate still sat. The ugly smear of barbecue sauce remained perfectly outlined on my cashmere coat. I picked up a linen napkin and wiped the fabric once, though I knew the stain was permanently set.
That was fine. Some stains were useful. They proved you had survived the fire.
Chloe stood frozen, watching my every movement. Her emerald silk dress seemed to have lost its luster. Her voice came out small, stripped of all its former arrogance. “Why didn’t you tell me who you were the second you walked in?”
I looked at her for a long, heavy moment. “Because I needed to know who you were.”
Her face crumpled. Pride is a hard addiction to break. “You hate me,” she stated, a single tear cutting a track through her foundation.
I considered lying. It would have sounded noble. But I was exhausted from performing goodness for people who had never protected my pain.
“Yes,” I said truthfully. “A part of me did. But hate is an incredibly heavy thing to carry. I stopped carrying it years ago. I needed both hands free to build my empire.”
Her eyes searched mine. “Then what is this? If it’s not revenge, what is it?”
I swept my gaze across the ballroom. “This is accountability. It’s the bill finally coming due.”
Preston ended his call, aggressively shoving his phone into his pocket. He spun toward Chloe, his face contorted in rage. “You stupid, arrogant woman! If you hadn’t started this tonight—”
The room recoiled as one. Chloe went perfectly still.
There he was. The monster behind the money. I watched her absorb the reality of the man she had married. He hadn’t married a queen; he had purchased a human shield.
Chloe looked down at the banking documents in her hands. “Did you forge my signature, Preston?”
His silence was a deafening confession. Chloe turned away from him, looking at me. “What do I do?”
I remembered my mother’s advice. Don’t become the person who hurt you.
“Get your own attorney,” I said. “Tell the truth before he tells it for you.”
I turned and walked out into the cold city night.
A month later, Kensington Estates imploded. Preston was indicted. Chloe filed for divorce.
Then, on a rainy Tuesday, a plain brown package arrived at my Manhattan office. No return address. My assistant placed it on my mahogany desk.
I opened it carefully. Inside, wrapped in tissue paper, was a battered, water-stained blue notebook. My high school journal.
But as I lifted it, another document slipped out from between the pages. A federal subpoena. And it had my name on it.
I stared at the federal subpoena resting on my mahogany desk, the harsh legal typography stark against the faded cover of my teenage journal. The Department of Justice was calling me as their star witness in the fraud case against Preston Kensington. I wasn’t just the architect of his financial ruin anymore; I was going to be the final nail in his coffin.
I pushed the subpoena aside and traced the water-stained edges of my blue notebook. A small, cream-colored note was tucked inside the front cover. The handwriting was elegant, a sharp contrast to the destruction it accompanied.
Eleanor, I kept this. At first, because I was a cruel girl who liked having a trophy. Later, because I was deeply ashamed. I am simply returning what was never mine to take. I will see you in court. —Chloe
I sat down slowly in my leather chair, the sounds of New York traffic fading into absolute silence. For a long time, I didn’t open it. I was terrified of the ghost waiting inside. But eventually, my thumb caught the edge, and I flipped it open.
The handwriting inside belonged to a girl I had spent my entire adult life trying to outrun. Someday I want to own buildings. I want to own the places where people stand, so no one can ever tell people like me that we don’t belong there.
I pressed a trembling hand over my mouth. There she was. A girl with a massive, terrifying prophecy hidden in her backpack, surrounded by people whose imaginations were simply too small to recognize it.
I turned the page. Someday, people like Chloe will have to say my name correctly.
I laughed. A real, messy, wet-eyed laugh that echoed in the cavernous office. Because she had. In a ballroom full of witnesses, Chloe had finally understood exactly what my name meant. The greatest victory wasn’t that Chloe had recognized me. The greatest victory was that I finally recognized myself.
Two weeks later, I stood on the exact same auditorium stage at Westbridge High School where Chloe had once humiliated me. The administration had begged me to be their keynote speaker. A hundred and fifty seniors stared up at me, their eyes restless.
I leaned into the microphone. I did not tell them a fairy tale.
“Some people in this world will decide exactly who you are before you ever open your mouth,” I said, my voice echoing. “They will label you. They will laugh at you. Do not build your life around proving cruel people wrong. Build your life around proving the bravest part of yourself right.”
The students started to stand up before I even finished walking off the stage. The applause erupted into a deafening roar. I let them clap, because somewhere inside my chest, sixteen-year-old Eleanor Vance was standing up, too.
As the applause washed over me, my phone vibrated in my blazer pocket. I pulled it out, glancing at the screen. It was a text message from a blocked number.
Preston made bail. And he knows exactly where you are right now.
If you want more stories like this, or if you’d like to share your thoughts about what you would have done in my situation, I’d love to hear from you. Your perspective helps these stories reach more people, so don’t be shy about commenting or sharing.
