
Stolen Grace
Chapter 3
That night, I walked into a private club on the Upper East Side, all dark wood, old oil paintings, cigar smoke, and leather. It was the kind of place where old money and Wall Street power cut deals without leaving fingerprints.
Henry Hale sat by the window. He had grown old and heavy, dressed in a dark gray suit with his tie knotted perfectly. Still, I recognized him at once. The brow, the eyes, the shape of his face. He looked almost exactly like the old photograph I had stared at for thirty years.
"Miss Walker." He didn't stand. He only lifted a hand.
I sat across from him.
He pushed a glass of whiskey toward me. "I looked into you. A girl from an Appalachian coal town. Scholarship to NYU. Then all the way to executive director at Northbridge. Impressive. I came from a place like that too. Talent matters, but opportunity matters more."
He placed a card on the table. "Ease up on Isabelle, and I can recommend you to the Columbia Business School advisory council. If Northbridge raises a new fund next year, I can introduce several LPs. You're still young. You need the right doors opened."
I looked at him. He didn't recognize me. Everyone who had seen my grandmother's picture said I looked like her when she was young, but he saw nothing.
Maybe he had never imagined that the woman he left behind could have a daughter, much less a granddaughter sitting across from him in Manhattan.
"Professor Hale," I said, "you came from Appalachia too. I'm curious. On your way up, how many lives did you step on?"
The smile left his face. He set down his glass with a soft click.
"Say it plainly." His eyes cooled. "What do you want?"
What did I want?
I thought of fifty years ago, when he took my grandmother's acceptance letter and scholarship forms and promised he would go to New York first, get settled, and come back.
He never did. He took Vivian Miller, the town councilman's daughter, and let her enter the New York Art Institute under Grace Walker's name. He used my grandmother's scholarship and life story to turn Vivian into a gifted painter who had clawed her way out of coal country.
My grandmother was left pregnant and alone, called a loose woman by a town with no mercy for women like her. My mother was born without a legal father. Teachers made her sit outside the classroom when parents complained. Kids poured coal dust into her books and told her she was dirty too.
At thirteen, she left school to work, then spent years altering suits until her fingers were scarred by needles. Two generations of women. Two pairs of ruined hands. They pushed me, inch by inch, to this room.
I looked at Henry Hale. "I want justice. Also, the final list is out. Northbridge didn't choose Isabelle."
He looked at me, and I looked back across the table and fifty years of rot.
At last, he gave a cold laugh. "Miss Walker, I met you tonight to give you one last chance. If you insist on blocking my granddaughter's path, don't blame me when I make sure you have no path left."
He stood, buttoned his suit jacket slowly, and walked away.
At ten that night, Northbridge Capital's website and social accounts posted an emergency statement.
The statement said Ava Walker, former executive director and interviewer for the summer analyst program, had maliciously blocked an outstanding female candidate and violated Northbridge's principles of fair recruitment.
Effective immediately, I had been terminated. No investigation. No hearing. Just a few icy lines and a photo from the annual report.
The comment section opened like a floodgate.
[So young and already an executive director? Sure, nothing shady there.]
[She probably couldn't stand another young, pretty woman joining the team. Women who pull up the ladder behind them are the worst.]
[If Isabelle Hale can't get in with that resume, what chance do normal people have?]
[Good for Northbridge. Clean out workplace bullies.]
My phone kept buzzing. Strangers cursed me. Industry contacts fished for gossip. People who once called me for favors sent stiff little messages pretending to care. Two texts came from Isabelle.
[Tomorrow Northbridge is holding a public briefing for me. Media, alumni, industry leaders, everyone will be there. I will walk into Wall Street with my head high, and you will not even be able to afford coffee in the Financial District.]
My mother sat beside me. She was in her fifties, but her hair had turned gray too early. The hands that had altered other people's suits for half her life clutched the hem of her shirt, knuckles white.
"Ava," she whispered, voice rough, "maybe we should let it go."
I took her hand. Those hands had sent me from a coal town to New York, from scholarship forms to Wall Street. Their fingertips were all old calluses and needle scars.
"Mom, we are not the ones who did wrong. They have owed this debt for fifty years. It's time they pay it."