Her Family Called Her Free Holiday Help — Until A CEO Asked For Her Company By Name-quetran123

Arthur Sterling’s voice came through my phone from my parents’ ruined dining room.

“Natalie,” he said, calm as a contract being signed. “Before you hang up, I need to ask one question about our shareholder summit.”

Behind him, someone dropped a fork.

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The sound was tiny, silver against china, but it traveled through the speaker with perfect clarity. My father’s breathing stopped. My mother made a small choking sound. Evelyn whispered Arthur’s name like she could still pull him back into the version of the night she had planned.

I stood beside the penthouse window with champagne cold against my fingertips and Manhattan spread below me in glittering blocks. Snow moved past the glass in clean white sheets. The dining room behind me smelled like butter pastry, seared beef, orange peel, and cedar from the centerpiece garlands my logistics team had built by hand.

My head chef, Marisol, paused with the carving knife above the beef Wellington.

Every person at my table looked over.

I kept the phone near my ear.

“Mr. Sterling,” I said. “Hart & Hearth is fully booked through mid-February.”

“I know,” he replied. “My office has been told that three times.”

That made me smile without showing my teeth.

Across the call, Evelyn found her voice.

“Arthur, please, this is a family misunderstanding.”

“No,” he said. “This is a management problem revealing itself in a dining room.”

The penthouse went still around me, but not the frightened kind of stillness. This was professional stillness. My team knew the sound of a negotiation opening. Phones lowered. Shoulders squared. Marisol set the knife down carefully on the silver tray.

Arthur continued, his voice nearer now, as if he had stepped away from the others.

“Natalie, I apologize for speaking business during your holiday evening. I also apologize for anything you heard from this room tonight. It was illuminating.”

My mother’s voice cut in, thin and sharp.

“Natalie, don’t be dramatic. Just tell him you can do the dinner.”

Dad added, “You owe your sister this much.”

I looked at the gold Hart & Hearth key card on the marble table. It had my name etched under the company logo: Natalie Hart, Founder.

“I don’t owe Evelyn labor,” I said. “I don’t owe anyone a kitchen.”

A chair scraped loudly from Connecticut.

“Natalie,” Evelyn hissed, no longer polished. “Do you have any idea what this could cost me?”

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