The laughter died first. Then the forks froze midair. And in the silence of a glittering Fifth Avenue penthouse, a voice cut through like glass.
“Get her out of here. Now.”
Every jeweled head turned toward the woman standing near the marble staircase — Margaret Whitmore, sixty, perfectly styled in silver and satin, her tone thick with disdain. The target of her fury?
A tall Black woman in an ivory gown, her calm composure the only thing holding back humiliation. “Excuse me?” the woman asked softly. Margaret’s lips curved into a cruel smile.
“You heard me. This isn’t a charity kitchen. You don’t belong here.”
The crowd chuckled — expensive laughter echoing against marble.
Champagne glasses tilted. Someone whispered, “Who let the help wander in?”
Phones began to rise, eager to capture the moment. The woman straightened.
Her name was Alicia Carter. She’d been invited by the Whitmore Foundation’s board chair himself, though clearly, that message hadn’t reached the family. Her calm eyes swept across the crowd, then back to Margaret.
“Actually, Mrs. Whitmore, I was invited.”
Margaret let out a short laugh. “I don’t care who invited you.
This is my home, and I decide who stays.”
Alicia’s lips parted, but before she could speak, a man in his thirties — Richard Whitmore Jr., the heir apparent — stepped forward. His smirk matched his mother’s. “Let’s not make a scene, Mother,” he said.
“I’m sure she just wandered in by mistake. We’ll have someone show her out.”
More laughter. More whispers.
And then, silence again — because Alicia had taken out her phone. She didn’t raise her voice. She didn’t argue.
She simply said, “I think it’s time I make a quick call.”
Margaret crossed her arms. “To who? The maître d’?
Security?”
Alicia met her eyes. “No. To the person who owns this building.”
For a moment, nobody spoke.
Then a snort came from somewhere near the piano. “The owner? That would be the Whitmores, sweetheart.”
Alicia nodded once.
“It used to be.”
And then she hit “call.”
The conversation was short — two sentences, at most. “Yes. It’s happening again,” she murmured into the phone.
“Go ahead.”
She slipped the phone back into her clutch and smiled. “You might want to check your email, Mrs. Whitmore.”
Margaret frowned.
Then her husband’s phone buzzed. So did her son’s. So did half the board members standing nearby.
The buzzes turned into alerts. Then gasps. “What—what is this?” Richard stammered, scrolling through his screen.
His face paled. “The press release… this can’t be real—”
Margaret snatched the phone from his hand, eyes scanning faster than her mind could keep up. Her flawless composure began to crack.
“The Whitmore Foundation’s assets… frozen? Effective immediately? Under investigation?”
She looked up, trembling.
“Who are you?”
Alicia took a calm sip of champagne before answering. “Alicia Carter. Interim Chairwoman of the Carter-Whitmore Group — as of this morning.”
“You’re lying,” Richard barked.
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