Three months later, the Bradford family hosted a grand celebration. The house glowed with chandeliers and candlelight. A jazz trio played in the corner. Guests filled the marble hallways with laughter and perfume. Judith wore diamonds that Natalie had secretly repurchased after they were pawned. Robert drank expensive bourbon that Natalie had ordered and delivered. Kimberly floated through the crowd in a champagne colored gown, greeting investors and socialites like a born queen.

Natalie stood near the kitchen doors, holding a tray of appetizers. She wore a plain black dress and flat shoes. No one asked why she served instead of celebrated. They simply assumed it was her place.

Her eight year old daughter Olivia tugged at her elbow.

“Mom, I am thirsty,” Olivia whispered. “Grandma said I should not touch the water pitchers because I might spill.”

Natalie lowered the tray and brushed Olivia’s hair from her forehead.

“Go with me,” she said gently. “We will get you juice.”

They walked across the ballroom. Olivia clutched a small plastic cup filled with grape juice. The crowd shifted, music swelled, and a thick carpet edge curled just enough to catch a small shoe.

Olivia stumbled.

Natalie reached for her, but the cup tilted first. Purple liquid flew forward and splashed directly onto Kimberly’s satin heels and the hem of her gown. A wet stain bloomed like ink on silk.

Conversation died. The jazz trio faltered for a beat before continuing softly.

Kimberly looked down. Then she looked at Olivia. Her eyes hardened.

“What have you done,” she hissed.

Natalie stepped forward quickly.

“I am so sorry,” she said. “I will pay for cleaning. It was an accident.”

Kimberly did not answer. Instead, rage twisted her features in a way Natalie had never seen so openly.

“Get away from me,” Kimberly shouted.

Before Natalie could move, Kimberly lifted her leg and kicked forward with force. Her heel struck Olivia’s side. The child fell backward onto the marble floor, gasping in pain.

Olivia screamed. A raw frightened sound. Guests stepped back in shock. Phones were raised but no one intervened.

Natalie dropped to her knees beside her daughter, lifting her gently.

“Olivia, look at me,” she whispered. “Breathe slowly. I am here.”

Olivia clutched her side, tears streaming down her face.

Kimberly stood over them, breathing hard.

“She ruined my shoes,” Kimberly snapped. “She needs to learn consequences.”