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Chapter 2: The Price of Pride Silence swallowed the showroom. Even the music seemed to disappear. Victoria stared at the young bride as though she had spoken another language. "You... what?" she whispered. The showroom manager calmly unfolded a thick leather folder. "This morning at 9:12 a.m., Hawthorne Holdings finalized the acquisition of this flagship boutique, all three regional branches, and the parent company." He looked directly at Emily. "As of five minutes ago... you are the majority owner." The two women who had laughed moments earlier stopped smiling. One awkwardly lowered the champagne glass in her hand. The other quietly stepped away from Victoria. Emily gently rubbed the red mark still visible on her cheek. Then she smiled. Not a triumphant smile. A disappointed one. "I came here because I wanted to choose my wedding dress like every other bride." She looked around the showroom. "I never wanted anyone to know who I was." Victoria forced a laugh. "This is ridiculous." She pointed at Emily. "She's lying." The manager calmly handed Emily a golden key card. "Only the owner has access to the executive office." Emily accepted it without looking at Victoria. Then she turned toward the security cameras mounted on the ceiling. "Could someone save the footage from the last twenty minutes?" The manager nodded immediately. "Already done, Miss." Victoria suddenly felt her stomach drop. The slap. The insults. The witnesses. Every second had been recorded. For the first time that afternoon... She looked afraid. / Chapter 1 / 2 15

Chapter 3: The Truth Behind the Dress

Chapter 3: The Truth Behind the Dress

"I think there's something everyone should know," Emily said quietly.

She walked toward the gown that had started everything.

"It wasn't even for me."

Confused murmurs spread across the showroom.

Emily smiled gently.

"My maid of honor lost her mother to cancer six months ago."

"She couldn't afford the dress she dreamed about."

"So I came here pretending to be an ordinary customer."

"I wanted to surprise her."

Several employees exchanged guilty looks.

Victoria frowned.

"You expect us to believe that?"

Emily reached into her purse and pulled out a handwritten letter.

It was from her best friend.

The paper was worn from being folded and unfolded too many times.

"I've never felt beautiful enough to wear a real wedding dress... but thank you for believing I deserve one."

The room fell silent.

Emily folded the letter carefully.

"My father taught me something."

"If people only respect you after learning your bank account..."

"They never respected you."

She looked at the sales associates.

"I'm not firing anyone for assuming I had less money."

"But anyone who watched a customer get assaulted..."

"...and did nothing..."

"...shouldn't work in customer service."

The employees lowered their heads.

One young saleswoman stepped forward, tears in her eyes.

"I'm sorry."

"I should have helped you."

Emily gave her a small nod.

"I know."

"You were the only one who looked ashamed."

Then she turned toward the manager.

"Keep her."

The young employee burst into tears.

Victoria, however...

May you like

Had turned completely pale.

Because security had just arrived.

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