My sister poured red wine on my steel-toe boots at her engagement dinner, but she didn’t know the admiral walking in three weeks later was coming for me.-iwachan

The first number I said was not a guess.

It was exact.

Hayes knew it the moment it left my mouth.

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His face did something small and ugly. His eyes moved toward the folder before his hand did.

That told me enough.

The admiral remained beside me, silent, his salute already lowered, his presence holding the entire ballroom in place.

No one laughed now.

Not the officers who had smirked at my boots three weeks earlier.

Not my sister.

Not my parents.

The same people who had looked through me were now staring like I had become a door they could not close.

I tapped the folder once.

“You should open it,” I said.

Hayes did not move.

Britney stepped forward instead, still trying to rescue the shape of the evening.

“This is ridiculous,” she said, but her voice came out thin.

It did not carry across the ballroom the way her cruelty had.

The admiral turned his head slightly.

That was all.

Britney stopped talking.

Hayes finally opened the folder.

On the first page was a payment authorization routed through a defense subcontractor Britney had introduced at Thanksgiving like a miracle.

She had worn a cream sweater that day.

My mother had made sweet potatoes from scratch.

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