I walked into my dad’s hotel gala and heard my stepmother snap, “Security, remove her.” I left without saying a word, then quietly
“What brand development?” I asked.
Owen shrugged. “He wanted the staff gym turned into a cigar lounge.”
“He doesn’t smoke cigars,” I said.
“No,” Owen replied. “But he photographs well with them.”
By 5:00, the pattern was obvious.
Celeste had not simply been spending.
She had been hollowing out the hotel.
Preston’s fake vendor accounts. Renovation deposits paid to shell companies. Luxury floral invoices routed through a cousin’s boutique. Event commissions collected twice. Consultant fees for reports no one had received. A $68,000 “guest experience research trip” to St. Barts.
My father’s signature appeared on some approvals.
Not all.
Enough.
At 6:20, Dad arrived.
This time, he entered through the lobby without Celeste.
I was standing near the front desk, reviewing guest satisfaction reports. He looked smaller in daylight. His suit was wrinkled, and his eyes were red.
“Mara,” he said.
The front desk agents pretended not to listen.
Dana closed her folder. “I’ll be in the office.”
She left us beside the marble columns my mother had imported from Italy during the renovation that nearly bankrupted them before it made them successful.
Dad put both hands in his pockets.
“Celeste didn’t tell me about Silverline,” he said.
“But you signed the payments.”
“She said Preston was managing modernization.”
“And you didn’t ask what that meant?”
He flinched.
I did not soften my voice.
“You taught me to read every contract twice.”
“I know.”
“You taught me never to sign under pressure.”
“I know.”
“You taught me that family money destroys families when nobody respects boundaries.”
His mouth tightened.
“I was lonely after your mother died,” he said.
There it was.
Not an excuse, but the closest thing he had to one.
I looked toward the ballroom doors. Staff were resetting the room for a medical conference. White linens. Water glasses. No trace remained of last night’s gala.
“I was lonely too,” I said.
He swallowed.
“I failed you.”
“Yes.”
The word stayed between us.
He nodded once, as if he knew he deserved it.
“Can I fix it?” he asked.
“Not by asking me to hand everything back.”
“I’m not asking that.”
“What are you asking?”
He looked older again, but clearer now.
“I want to stay involved with the hotel. I don’t want Celeste or Preston involved. I’ll sign whatever restrictions Elliot wants. Salary freeze. Oversight. No unilateral approvals.”
I studied him.
“Are you leaving her?”
He looked away.
That was enough of an answer.
I closed the folder in my hands.
“Then no.”
His head snapped back toward me. “Mara—”
“No,” I repeated. “You cannot keep one hand in this hotel and the other in Celeste’s house. She tried to legally erase me this morning. She accused me of fraud. She used my mother’s mental health as a weapon. She treated employees like furniture and the hotel like a private wallet.”
“I can control her.”
“You couldn’t control her in a ballroom full of witnesses.”
His face went pale.
Behind him, the elevator chimed.
Celeste stepped out.
Of course she did.
She wore cream silk, diamonds, and a smile designed for cameras. Preston followed her in a blue suit, tanned, handsome, and empty-eyed. Two men with briefcases came behind them.
“Mara,” Celeste called, sweetly. “There you are.”
Dad turned. “Celeste, not now.”
She ignored him.
“I’ve brought counsel,” she said. “And Preston, since his professional reputation has been defamed.”
Preston gave me a lazy smile. “Rough look, Mara. Playing hotel queen already?”
I glanced at the two attorneys. One looked uncomfortable. The other looked expensive.
“You are trespassing,” I said.
Celeste laughed. “In my husband’s hotel?”
“In trust property where your administrative access has been revoked.”
Her smile thinned.
The expensive attorney stepped forward. “Ms. Halston, we are prepared to seek injunctive relief if you interfere with established business operations.”
