Stepmom Mocked the Heiress at a Retirement Party. Then the Papers Came Out-habe

The first thing people noticed about Diana Chen was never her cruelty.

It was her polish.

She had the kind of beauty that made strangers forgive the first five minutes of condescension because the packaging looked expensive enough to trust.

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Her blonde hair was always arranged as if wind, weather, and inconvenience were things that happened only to other women.

Her diamonds never looked sentimental.

They looked selected.

My father, James Chen, used to say that business taught him to study hands before faces.

Faces performed.

Hands told the truth.

That was why, on the night of his retirement party, I watched Diana’s hand more than I watched her smile.

The smile was flawless.

The hand around her champagne flute was too relaxed.

She believed she had already won.

The ballroom at the Harborstone Hotel had been staged to make my father’s life look clean and inevitable.

Amber light poured from chandeliers.

White lilies rose from mirrored centerpieces.

Waiters moved between the tables with silver trays of champagne, seared scallops, and canapés arranged so precisely they seemed designed for photographs instead of hunger.

Along the far wall stood the company display.

Chen Manufacturing, thirty years.

One faded photo showed my father in a drafty warehouse with rolled-up sleeves and grease on his forearm.

Another showed the opening of the second plant.

Another showed a ribbon-cutting outside the third.

Acrylic panels listed regional expansion, industry awards, employee milestones, and the kind of words corporate anniversaries love: legacy, endurance, vision.

I had helped choose those photos.

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