She Caught Her Sister in Her Engagement Dress at Her App Launch-myhoa

ACT I — THE GLASS WALL

By 8:17 p.m., Lumina Tech looked exactly the way I had imagined it when the company was still just code, coffee, and a cracked laptop on my grandmother’s kitchen table. The lobby lights were bright, the press wall was polished, and my name was printed on every badge.

The launch floor below the VIP lounge pulsed with low music and nervous money. Investors stood in circles pretending not to watch each other. Reporters checked batteries. My team moved with that careful speed people have when one mistake could become a headline.

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I should have been backstage reviewing my keynote. Instead, I was standing outside the glass walls of the VIP lounge, holding a tablet so tightly the edge left a line across my palm.

My sister was wearing my engagement dress.

Not a similar dress. Not a sample. My dress. The bespoke ivory silk I had chosen for my rehearsal dinner, the one with beadwork at the shoulders and a hem that had taken three fittings to get right.

The LED accent lights crawled over the fabric while Chloe sat across from Julian at the marble table. The room smelled faintly of chilled champagne, citrus polish, and the warm electrical hum that always lived behind our walls on launch nights.

Julian reached for Chloe’s hand with the same careful tenderness he used in public when photographers were nearby. “Relax,” he said. “Elena won’t know.” Then he leaned across the marble and kissed her as if my future were just another room he had access to.

Chloe laughed into her champagne. “Elena never knows anything until someone explains it slowly.” She said it with the kind of ease that told me it was not the first time she had practiced disrespecting me with him.

My lead cybersecurity engineer, Marcus, stood beside me. He had followed the VIP feed because he noticed an unusual badge entry in the restricted lounge. His face had gone pale before he handed me the tablet.

“Elena,” he whispered, “I can cut their access badges right now and have security drag them out.”

I looked through the glass at my sister in my dress, my fiancé at her table, and my company glowing below us like a city I had built with my own hands.

“No,” I said. “Tell AV to sync my tablet to the main stage projector.”

ACT II — THE ACCESS I GAVE THEM

There are betrayals that explode, and there are betrayals that compile. Line by line. Permission by permission. Password by password. By the time they run, they look inevitable, but someone had to write them.

I had written too much of this one myself.

Chloe was my younger sister, which meant I had spent most of my life translating her chaos into something other people could forgive. When she needed an interview blazer, I gave her mine. When she needed a quiet apartment, I gave her my spare key. When she cried at my engagement dinner, I let her sit beside me so nobody would notice she had arrived late.

Two weeks before the launch, she asked to see photos from my dress fitting. She said she wanted to know what happiness looked like on me. I sent them because I believed envy could still wear the face of affection.

Julian was subtler. He had entered my life during Lumina Tech’s second funding round, when the company was too fragile to impress anyone and too promising for people to ignore. He learned my investor schedule, my coffee order, and the exact tone to use when he wanted to sound useful.

He came to pitch dinners. He stood behind me after brutal meetings. He told strangers he had “helped launch” Lumina because he once suggested changing the UI color palette from cobalt to deep blue.

At first, I laughed at that. Later, I corrected it softly. Eventually, I stopped correcting it at all because I was tired, and because love makes intelligent people donate credit like it costs nothing.

They mistook it for permission.

At 8:17 p.m. on launch night, Marcus had three things open on my tablet: the Lumina Tech run-of-show PDF, the VIP lounge badge-entry report, and the HD security archive from camera VL-3. A fourth window carried live audio from the lounge.

That audio feed existed for one reason. When investors discussed confidential product terms, legal needed a clean archive. The microphone array was calibrated enough to separate glass clinks from speech. It could catch a whisper under bass from the launch floor.

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