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Charity Gala Scandal Novel Cover

Charity Gala Scandal

Every inch the image I'd helped her craft. My chest swelled with that familiar mixture of pride and something else I didn't want to examine too closely. This was our work. Our success. Victoria's speech began exactly as we'd rehearsed. She spoke about the power of women lifting each other up, about mentorship and sisterhood. She made eye contact with me in the wings, her smile soft and genuine, and I felt my eyes prick with unexpected tears. See? I told myself. Everything's fine. "None of this would be possible," Victoria continued, her voice rich with emotion, "without the incredible team behind our foundation. Particularly my dear friend and colleague, Amelia Clarke." Warmth flooded through me. Public recognition was rare from Victoria. I smiled, wiping at my eyes. Then her tone shifted. The change was subtle at first—a slight hardening around her eyes, a shift in her posture. "But tonight, with great sadness, I must address something that weighs heavily on my heart." The warmth in my chest turned to ice.
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Chapter 1

The chandelier light felt too bright, too exposing. I stood backstage at the Grand Ballroom of the Met, clipboard pressed against my chest like a shield, running through Victoria's speech notes for the third time.

Every word had been crafted, tested, perfected.

This was supposed to be her crowning moment—shortlisted for the Humanitarian Excellence Award, the kind of recognition that would cement her foundation's reputation for years to come.

"Amelia, the photographer from Vogue wants Victoria for another five minutes," her assistant breathed as she rushed past, trailing the scent of expensive perfume.

I nodded absently, checking my phone.

Fifteen minutes until Victoria took the stage.

The ballroom hummed with the controlled chaos of high society—crystal glasses clinking, designer heels clicking against marble, the low murmur of conversation punctuated by practiced laughter. I'd orchestrated hundreds of these events, but tonight felt different.

A tightness had settled in my chest since this morning, a whisper of unease I couldn't name.

I touched my pearl earrings—a nervous habit—and moved toward the stage entrance to scan the crowd.

Donors, board members, journalists, influencers. Everyone who mattered. Everyone who believed in Victoria's vision of female empowerment.

Everyone who believed in the story I'd helped her tell.

"Did you finalize the transition announcement?" I heard Victoria's assistant ask someone near the curtain.

I froze mid-step. Transition announcement?

My mind raced through the evening's schedule. There was nothing about a transition. No organizational changes, no staff updates. I would have written that statement myself.

I turned toward them, but they'd already disappeared into the crowd. The unease solidified into something heavier.

I pulled out my phone, scrolling through my emails, our shared calendar, our planning documents. Nothing. Maybe I'd misheard. Maybe it was about something else entirely.

Victoria always had her reasons.

Strategic surprises that made sense in hindsight.

I'd learned to trust her instincts over the years, even when I didn't understand them at first.

The lights dimmed. Show time.

I slipped into the wings as the emcee's voice filled the ballroom, warm and reverent. "Ladies and gentlemen, it is my profound honor to introduce a woman who needs no introduction. Philanthropist, advocate, visionary—Victoria Hale."

Applause erupted.

Victoria glided onto the stage in her signature emerald gown, the one I'd helped her select because it photographed beautifully under stage lights. She was radiant, confident, every inch the humanitarian leader she'd spent years becoming.

Every inch the image I'd helped her craft.

My chest swelled with that familiar mixture of pride and something else I didn't want to examine too closely. This was our work. Our success.

Victoria's speech began exactly as we'd rehearsed.

She spoke about the power of women lifting each other up, about mentorship and sisterhood.

She made eye contact with me in the wings, her smile soft and genuine, and I felt my eyes prick with unexpected tears.

See? I told myself. Everything's fine.

"None of this would be possible," Victoria continued, her voice rich with emotion, "without the incredible team behind our foundation. Particularly my dear friend and colleague, Amelia Clarke."

Warmth flooded through me. Public recognition was rare from Victoria. I smiled, wiping at my eyes.

Then her tone shifted.

The change was subtle at first—a slight hardening around her eyes, a shift in her posture.

"But tonight, with great sadness, I must address something that weighs heavily on my heart."

The warmth in my chest turned to ice.

"In any organization, trust is paramount. Donor privacy, confidential information—these are sacred responsibilities." Victoria's gaze swept across the ballroom, deliberately avoiding me now. "It has come to my attention that there have been unauthorized accesses to confidential donor information within our organization."

No.

No, no, no.

"Amelia Clarke, my trusted friend and colleague—" Victoria's voice caught perfectly, a masterclass in controlled emotion, "—has been involved in activities that compromise our ethical standards. Effective immediately, she will be transitioning out of her role with the foundation."

The ballroom erupted. Gasps, whispers building like a wave. Hundreds of heads turned toward the wings. Hundreds of phones lifted, cameras focusing on me like a firing squad.

I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. The words made no sense, each syllable hitting me like a physical blow. Unauthorized access? Ethical concerns? This wasn't real. This couldn't be real.

But Victoria stood at the podium, her expression sorrowful and resolute, and I understood with sudden, crushing clarity: this was planned. Rehearsed. Strategic.

I was the surprise announcement.

My legs moved without conscious thought, carrying me onto the stage through a tunnel of whispers and camera flashes. The lights were blinding. Victoria's face came into focus—concerned, apologetic, perfect for the cameras.

She extended her hand toward me, that same hand I'd held through countless strategy sessions and late-night planning meetings. "Don't make a scene," she whispered behind her smile, her voice cold and unfamiliar.

Something inside me shattered.

Years of loyalty, of working in the shadows while she basked in spotlight I'd created. Years of believing in friendship, in sisterhood, in the mission we'd supposedly shared. All of it crumbled in the space between her smile and her whispered threat.

My hand moved before my brain could stop it.

The slap connected with her cheek with a crack that echoed through the suddenly silent ballroom. Victoria's head snapped to the side, her carefully applied red lipstick smearing across her face. For three infinite seconds, the world suspended—her shocked expression, the collective intake of breath, the forest of phones capturing every angle.

Then chaos.

Camera flashes exploded like lightning. Voices erupted. But I was already turning, walking through the crowd that parted before me like water, their faces blurring into a sea of judgment and fascination.

My hands were shaking. My heart was racing. And somewhere in my purse, my phone was already buzzing with notifications as #GalaSlap began its viral spread.

But all I could think as I pushed through the ballroom doors into the cold night air was: What have I done?

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