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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 3

The coffee shop Marcus Webb chose was deliberately unremarkable—a cramped place in Brooklyn with chipped tables and the kind of clientele that wouldn't recognize me from viral videos. I arrived fifteen minutes early, clutching my leather portfolio against my chest like armor, my hands already trembling.

Marcus walked in exactly on time, scanning the room with practiced efficiency before his eyes landed on me. He was older than his byline photo suggested, maybe mid-forties, with salt-and-pepper hair and the kind of weariness that comes from years of chasing stories nobody wants told.

"Amelia Clarke." He didn't offer his hand. Just slid into the seat across from me and ordered black coffee without asking if I wanted anything. "You've got twenty minutes."

I opened my portfolio, fingers fumbling with the tabs I'd organized so carefully. "I know what this looks like—"

"It looks like revenge." His voice was flat, matter-of-fact. "Disgruntled employee gets fired, lashes out physically, then tries to salvage her reputation by manufacturing a scandal."

The words stung more than I expected. I'd prepared for skepticism, but hearing it stated so bluntly made my throat tight. "That's not what this is."

"Isn't it?" He leaned back, studying me with eyes that had seen too many desperate sources. "I covered Victoria Hale's foundation last year. Know what I found? Impeccable records. Glowing donor testimonials. Board members who worship her. You know what else I found? Nothing. Not a single red flag."

I spread out the financial reports, my hands shaking so badly the papers rustled. "These are internal documents from the last three years. Look at the donation totals—public versus internal. The discrepancies average five hundred thousand per quarter."

Marcus glanced at the papers without touching them. "You had access to these files. Victoria's lawyers are already claiming you stole proprietary information. This could just as easily be evidence of your crimes as hers."

"Then explain the expense categories." My voice came out sharper than intended. "'Strategic Initiatives'—two million dollars over eighteen months with no project documentation. 'Operational Costs' that exceed the foundation's stated overhead by sixty percent."

"Victoria's a socialite running a legitimate nonprofit. Operational costs in that world are high. Galas, networking, donor cultivation—it all costs money." He took a sip of coffee, his expression unchanged. "You're grasping at shadows because you're angry. I get it. But I'm not writing a hit piece based on the revenge fantasies of a woman who assaulted her boss on camera."

The word "assaulted" landed like a slap itself. I felt my face flush, shame and fury mixing in equal measure. "I documented everything for three years. Every meeting, every financial review, every—"

"Your documentation is worthless." Marcus's voice wasn't cruel, just clinical. "Your credibility is destroyed. That video has ten million views. People see a unstable woman who couldn't handle her boss's success. That's the narrative, and nothing you show me changes it."

I stared at the papers spread between us, all my careful work reduced to the desperate scrambling of a disgraced employee. My vision blurred. I wouldn't cry. Not here. Not in front of him.

"Victoria framed me," I whispered. "She's been stealing from donors who trusted her, from women who believed in her mission. And she destroyed me to keep that secret."

Marcus stood, leaving a five-dollar bill on the table. "Here's some free advice: let it go. Get a lawyer for the civil suit. Rebuild your life somewhere else. Because right now? You're just feeding Victoria's narrative about female workplace resentment. You're making it worse."

He walked toward the door, then paused. "For what it's worth, I've seen plenty of revenge stories. They all start exactly like this—someone convinced they're pursuing justice when they're really just pursuing payback. Don't be that person."

The door chimed as he left. I sat alone with my cold coffee and my worthless evidence, surrounded by the low murmur of strangers' conversations. Twenty minutes. That's all my three years of loyalty had bought me. Twenty minutes of skepticism and dismissal.

I gathered my papers with numb fingers, carefully returning them to their tabs. Marcus was wrong. This wasn't about revenge. It couldn't be just about revenge.

But as I walked out into the gray Brooklyn afternoon, his words echoed in my skull: *You're just feeding Victoria's narrative.*

My phone buzzed. Another legal notice from Victoria's attorneys, detailing additional damages they'd be seeking. Another news alert about my "violent outburst." Another connection severed.

I stopped on the sidewalk, people flowing around me like I was a stone in a stream. I had no job, no credibility, no allies. I had evidence nobody would believe and a viral video that would follow me forever.

But I also had something else. Something Marcus's dismissal had crystallized into sharp, cold clarity.

I had nothing left to lose.

And that, I realized as I turned toward the subway, might be the most dangerous thing Victoria Hale had ever given me.

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