They Called Her Dress Cheap. Then The CEO Bowed Before Everyone-myhoa

My father saw my navy dress before he saw me.

That was the first small mercy, I suppose, because it gave me one last second to believe he might still smile.

The Oakmont foyer was warm with chandelier light and the smell of white roses, candle wax, and champagne already poured too early.

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A string quartet played somewhere past the ballroom doors, soft enough to sound expensive.

I stood inside the entrance with my hair pinned up, my mother’s pearl necklace at my throat, and a gift box in my hands.

Inside that box was a vintage fountain pen I had spent three weeks finding because it looked like the one Dad used to carry when I was little.

Back then, before the big house, before Diane, before Collins Manufacturing became something men in tuxedos whispered about over cocktails, Dad carried a pen in the pocket of his work shirt.

He used it to sign invoices on the hood of an old pickup truck.

He used it to write my name on brown lunch bags when he packed sandwiches after Mom died.

He used it to mark measurements on scrap paper in the garage while I sat nearby with homework spread over a folding chair.

That was the father I brought the pen for.

The man standing in front of me at his sixtieth birthday party was different.

His eyes slid down my navy dress, paused at the pearls, and moved past me toward the room filling with formal gowns, black tuxedos, and investors pretending not to listen.

When he finally spoke, he lowered his voice.

“Rebecca, maybe it would be better if you skipped tonight.”

For a second, I thought I had misheard him.

There are sentences your mind refuses to accept the first time because accepting them would change too much at once.

I looked at the gift box in my hands, then back at him.

“Skipped your birthday party?”

Diane stepped beside him before he could answer.

She wore a fitted red gown and a smile that had never once reached her eyes in all the years I had known her.

“It’s black tie,” she said. “We have very important people here.”

Dad cleared his throat.

“There are business people coming. High-level people. It’s just… your dress isn’t quite right for this crowd.”

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