He Mocked Her Black Gown Until the Auction Price Exposed Him-myhoa

The first thing Elias said when he saw my gown was loud enough for half the ballroom to hear.

“My God, Ava,” he said, raising his champagne glass with that crooked little smile people used to call charming, “it looks like industrial drapery.”

Then he tilted his head and added, “Or maybe a luxury funeral shroud.”

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The people around him laughed.

Not loudly.

That would have been too honest.

They laughed in the soft, polished way people laugh when they want cruelty to pass for wit.

I stood at the top of the marble staircase inside the Hawthorne Museum and let it happen.

The chandeliers burned white above me.

Camera flashes went off below.

The whole ballroom smelled like champagne, expensive perfume, rain-damp wool, and the lemon polish the museum staff must have used on the floors that afternoon.

I could feel the silk of the gown against my skin, smooth and heavy, matte black with one structured shoulder and a line so severe it made people uncomfortable before they could explain why.

That was the point.

Nothing about that dress was meant to soothe them.

Nothing about me was meant to soothe Elias.

Three weeks earlier, he had tried to bury me.

Not privately.

Not accidentally.

In front of the whole industry.

He had started with buyers, because buyers are where fear becomes math.

He told one that Vale Atelier was overextended.

He told another that my lead investors were pulling out.

He told two editors in New York that my divorce had made me erratic, which was a cleaner word than broken and a more expensive word than unstable.

By Monday at 9:14 a.m., my inbox had begun to change.

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