Chapter 29 – When Power Moves
Clarissa didn't cry when she got home.
She didn't throw her bag or scream into her pillow or pace the room like a wounded girl. Instead, she stood in front of her mirror, carefully removing her earrings, her expression smooth and distant, as though the evening had been nothing more than a mild inconvenience.
But her hands shook.
The image replayed over and over in her mind,the candlelight, Brian's hand on Alice's cheek, the kiss. Public. Unapologetic. Real.
Humiliation burned in her chest.
She had been raised never to be humiliated.
Clarissa reached for her phone.
"Mother," she said when the call connected, her voice controlled but tight. "I need to see you. Now."
There was a pause on the other end.
"Is something wrong?" her mother asked calmly.
"Yes," Clarissa replied, staring at her reflection. "Brian kissed her. In public."
Another pause, longer this time.
"I'll have tea prepared," her mother said. "Come."
Mrs. Vivienne stone didn't raise her voice.
She never needed to.
She sat in her sunlit sitting room, porcelain cup cradled in one elegant hand, her posture straight, her silver-streaked hair perfectly arranged. Wealth clung to her the way perfume clung to skin subtle, expensive, undeniable.
Clarissa paced in front of her like a caged animal.
"He did it deliberately," Clarissa said sharply. "In a restaurant people talk about. With Alice. Like I meant nothing."
Vivienne lifted her teacup, unfazed. "Sit down, Clarissa."
Clarissa obeyed, though her jaw clenched.
"You said Brian was becoming distant," her mother continued calmly. "You said there was a girl."
"Yes, but this...this is different. If people find out, if it spreads, do you know what that does to our family? To me?" Clarissa's voice cracked despite herself. "Everyone will think I was discarded. Replaced."
Vivienne took a measured sip of her tea.
"Were you?" she asked.
Clarissa stiffened. "Mother."
"I'm asking," Mrs. Harrington said smoothly. "Because if that girl truly is the reason Brian ended the engagement, then she is not just a passing inconvenience. She is a problem."
Clarissa's eyes glittered. "She works in a diner. She's poor. She's nothing."
Mrs. Harrington smiled faintly.
"Nothing," she repeated, setting her cup down. "Is exactly what makes her dangerous."
Clarissa frowned. "What do you mean?"
Mrs. Harrington leaned back slightly, folding her hands in her lap. "Girls like that don't understand consequences. They believe love is enough. They don't see the machinery behind power, the strings, the pressure, the quiet agreements."
She tilted her head. "Which makes them very easy to break."
Clarissa's breathing slowed.
"You've already looked into her," Mrs. Harrington continued. "I know that much. What else do you know?"
Clarissa hesitated, then smirked. "She's a student. Lives modestly. Works at a small diner near campus. No connections. No safety net."
Mrs. Harrington nodded. "Good."
Clarissa leaned forward. "What are you going to do?"
Mrs. Harrington's smile sharpened.
"Investigate," she said. "And then... apply pressure."
Alice didn't know she was being watched.
She moved through her day as usual, the weight of Clarissa's threat still heavy in her chest but pushed aside by necessity. Bills didn't care about fear. Assignments didn't pause for anxiety. Life kept moving, whether she was ready or not.
The diner was busy that afternoon, the air thick with the smell of coffee and fried food. Alice tied her apron, forced a smile onto her face, and stepped onto the floor.
She didn't notice the woman sitting in the corner booth at first.
Vivienne observed quietly, her designer coat folded neatly beside her, her gaze sharp and assessing. She watched the way Alice moved efficient, polite, careful. Watched the way she smiled at customers, how she apologized even when she wasn't at fault.
She noted the shoes, The uniform, slightly worn. The tiredness behind the girl's eyes.
So this is her, Mrs. Harrington thought.
She flagged down the manager.
"I'd like to speak with you," she said pleasantly.
Minutes later, she sat across from him in the small office at the back of the diner.
"I represent several business interests in this area," Mrs. Harrington began, sliding a card across the desk. "Including the leasing company that owns this building."
The manager's expression shifted instantly.
"I'm afraid there's been a complaint," she continued smoothly. "Multiple, actually."
The manager frowned. "About what?"
"Your employee," Mrs. Harrington said lightly. "Alice."
The manager stiffened. "She's one of our best workers."
Mrs. Harrington smiled. "That may be. But reputations are fragile. I'd hate for yours to suffer because of... associations."
She leaned forward just enough to let the implication settle.
"Of course," she added, "there are other diners in the city. It would be a shame if business arrangements had to be... reconsidered."
The silence stretched.
"I understand," the manager said finally.
Mrs. Stone stood. "Wonderful."
Alice sensed something was wrong the moment her manager called her into the office.
He wouldn't meet her eyes.
"Alice," he began, clearing his throat, "we've had some complaints."
Her stomach dropped. "Complaints?"
"Yes. About your behavior. Your professionalism."
Her heart pounded. "I don't understand. I've never..."
"I know," he interrupted, uncomfortable. "But things are... complicated right now."
She stared at him, dread curling in her chest.
"I'm going to have to let you go."
The words hit like a slap.
"What?" Alice whispered.
"I'm sorry," he said quietly. "It's not personal."
It felt very personal.
Alice walked out of the diner in a daze, her apron folded under her arm, the bell above the door chiming softly behind her. The street felt unreal, like she'd stepped into someone else's life.
Her phone buzzed.
A text from Clarissa.
First things first.
Alice's hands trembled.
That evening, Clarissa lounged comfortably in her mother's sitting room, sipping wine.
"She's fired," vivienne said calmly.
Clarissa's lips parted slowly, delight flickering across her face. "Already?"
"You can't fight what you can't see," her mother replied. "And financial instability is a very effective way to introduce fear."
Clarissa laughed softly. "Good."
"This is only the beginning, her tone cool. "We'll apply pressure slowly. Scholarships. Housing. Academic standing. We'll remind her exactly where she belongs."
Clarissa leaned back, satisfaction settling in her chest.
"And Brian?" she asked.
Vivenne eyes hardened.
"Men like Brian don't like messes," she said. "Once this girl becomes one, he'll walk away on his own."
Clarissa smiled.
Outside, unaware of just how deep the trap had been set, Alice sat on her bed, staring at her phone, her future suddenly uncertain.





