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Chapter 2

Author: September
At four that afternoon, my assistant knocked on my office door. She looked uncomfortable.

"Ava, Mrs. Hale is here. Daniel said you need to see her."

I looked up. Through the glass wall, an elderly woman stood in the sunlight, wearing an ivory suit, a pearl brooch, and silver-gray hair pinned into perfect order. She was in her seventies, but time had treated her like a preferred client. I asked my assistant to let her in.

When she sat down, even the fold of her skirt looked rehearsed. "Miss Walker," she said. Her voice was soft, but the command underneath it was not. "Isabelle likes Northbridge Capital. She wants to begin her career here. You will arrange it."

A cream envelope slid across my desk. It was not sealed. Inside was a generous charity check and a pledge to donate to Northbridge's women in finance initiative.

I didn't touch it. I only looked at her hands.

They were pale, full, and carefully manicured. A diamond bracelet sat on one wrist with the quiet arrogance of serious money. Those hands had never scrubbed coal water from work shirts, split open in winter, or bent all night over a sewing machine. The real Grace Walker didn't have hands like that.

My grandmother's knuckles had bent out of shape from mending miners' uniforms. When she died, her fingers still would not straighten.

I looked at the woman in front of me. "Mrs. Hale, the interview process is finished. Isabelle didn't pass."

Her smile thinned.

"Don't you find that ridiculous?" She leaned back, peering at me through gold-rimmed glasses. "Isabelle won a national finance competition and the top investment proposal award. You turned her away and picked a girl without a proper sponsor. Is that what you call principle?"

"The candidate has been chosen." I pushed the envelope back. "Lila Brooks is a better fit."

Her eyes dropped to the envelope, then she gave a soft laugh. "Is it not enough? Miss Walker, after all these years on Wall Street, surely you don't still believe everything is decided by resumes and interviews. Name your price. Or do you want a better title?"

I smiled too. "Before I make an investment, I do due diligence. People, money, documents, background. If any of them are dirty, the deal blows up eventually. As an artist and philanthropist, you should know the value of reputation, unless principle is just another thing you trade."

The warmth vanished from her face.

She crossed her arms and looked at me as if I were something cheap that had slipped into the room by mistake. "You really think highly of yourself, don't you?"

She leaned forward, voice dropping. "I've seen plenty of young women like you. No family. No backing. Just a pretty face and a little bite. Do you expect me to believe you got this far all by yourself? Now that you have a seat at the table, you want to use my granddaughter to build some girlboss shrine to your own virtue?"

She scoffed. "Don't be naive. Wall Street is not a place where a miner's-town girl changes the rules with pretty speeches. My family has roots here. Networks, funds, board seats. You can't pick those up by having dinner with the right men a few times."

I listened quietly. Under that elegant face, what had been hidden for fifty years finally showed itself. A stolen name, a stolen identity, a stolen life, and still the same arrogance. She was not Grace Walker.

Grace Walker was my grandmother, who had died with her eyes open, still whispering the name of the man who had promised to come back.

I tightened my palm and kept my voice cold. "Are you done? Mrs. Hale, the result will not change. Please leave."

She stood, snatched the envelope from my desk, and shoved it back into her handbag. "Ava Walker, you will regret this."

The door slammed. Her heels had not been gone ten minutes before Daniel rushed in again.

"What the hell are you trying to do?" He didn't even close the door. "Put Isabelle Hale in the program. She is not just an intern. Behind her are Professor Hale, the Hale foundation, and a network we cannot afford to piss off."

"She failed my interview." I stayed seated. "And the posting system requires my electronic signature. No one can change the final list without it."

Daniel's expression changed. "Ava, don't think closing two big deals last year gives you a license to play queen of Northbridge. You are gambling with everyone's interests."

"I'm not gambling." I looked at him. "I'm following the rules."

I let the silence sit, then smiled. "Relax. I'll speak to Professor Hale myself."

Daniel stared, as if he hadn't expected me to agree so easily. When he left, he slammed the door behind him.

Sunlight fell across my desk. Isabelle's resume was still open, with two names printed neatly in the family section: Henry Hale and Grace Walker-Hale.

One was my grandfather, a liar who had abandoned his own blood. The other was the thief who had taken my grandmother's life.

I stared at them for a long time, then picked up my phone.
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  • Stolen Grace   Chapter 8

    By that evening, New York police and federal investigators had entered the Northbridge Capital building.Henry Hale and Vivian Miller were taken in for questioning on suspected identity fraud, scholarship fraud, falsified records, and unlawful appropriation of another person's rights and benefits. Isabelle Hale was taken back by Wharton for an academic integrity review. Her competition titles, investment pitch award, and media honors were all placed under reexamination.That night, Northbridge Capital issued a second statement.Daniel was suspended by the board pending investigation. The firm withdrew my termination, admitted the earlier statement had been released without independent review, and publicly apologized to me, Lila Brooks, and every affected candidate.Soon after, Columbia University suspended all of Henry Hale's honorary titles and advisory roles. Wharton announced that Isabelle was under investigation for major plagiarism and academic misconduct and that her enrollment a

  • Stolen Grace   Chapter 7

    My mother's back was slightly bent. A small photograph was taped to the black box in her arms.It was my grandmother's ashes.She walked to the front step by step. When she lifted her face, the room fell silent.She looked too much like Henry Hale.The same brow. The same eyes. Even the way her mouth pressed into a line was almost identical.No DNA test was needed. The cameras had already shown everyone the answer.The shutters started again, faster than before.My mother took a paper from her bag. It was her birth certificate.Date of birth: June 13, 1975.Mother: Grace Walker.Father: blank.In one of Henry's letters, he had written: I will come back before the baby is born.He had not.Henry swayed and caught the back of a chair, his fingers turning white.My mother didn't look at him. She lowered her eyes to the black box."Mom," she said softly, "the man you waited for all your life is here today. I brought you to see him."Then she looked at Henry. "Look at his face. Look at the

  • Stolen Grace   Chapter 6

    For a moment, Henry Hale's expression cracked.Then he put his professor's face back on."Miss Walker," he said, looking toward the cameras with a wounded dignity that had fooled people for decades, "I don't know what my family has done to offend you so deeply that you would invent such a vicious story. My wife Grace and I have been married for fifty years. She left that town through her own talent. Are you so desperate to attack Isabelle that you will destroy the reputation of the previous generation too?""Grace?" I cut him off and pointed to the woman beside him. "Do you mean her, or do you mean the Grace Walker you left behind in an Appalachian coal town?"The room went still.The woman shot to her feet so fast that her chair hit the table behind her. "What nonsense are you talking about? This is a formal press conference, not a place for people like you to throw a tantrum."I didn't look at her. I pressed the clicker.An old yellowed photograph appeared on the screen. A young woma

  • Stolen Grace   Chapter 5

    For one second, the blood drained from Isabelle's face.Then she frowned, her eyes still red, though her voice sharpened. "Ava, there is a limit to how far you can target me. Smearing me in front of the media is low, even for you."I didn't look at the cameras. I looked only at her. "You said capital should flow to companies that matter. Then tell everyone the core valuation logic behind your award-winning Future Cities Energy M&A proposal."Her lips pressed together. "That is confidential business information. I don't have to disclose it here.""Fine." I nodded. "Then let's keep it simple. Which sensitivity assumptions did you use for the decline curve in storage costs? Why did your model release merger synergies only in year three? And the regulatory risk mitigation clause you mentioned during the investment committee defense, which state government filing did it come from?"Isabelle opened her mouth. For a split second, her eyes went blank. Then she steadied herself."I will not fal

  • Stolen Grace   Chapter 4

    The next morning, Northbridge Capital's largest roadshow hall had been turned into a press conference stage. A blue and white backdrop read: Protect Fair Hiring. Support Women in Finance.Daniel and several partners sat in the main row. Henry Hale sat in the guest seats with the woman publicly known as Grace Walker-Hale beside him.Isabelle sat between them in a black skirt suit, her eyes reddened just enough to look wounded but not messy. Cameras lined the aisles, the livestream light glowing red.Daniel stepped to the front and adjusted his tie. "Thank you for coming. Today's briefing concerns our former executive director, Ava Walker, who maliciously obstructed an outstanding candidate during Northbridge Capital's summer analyst recruitment. Northbridge stands for professionalism, fairness, and diversity. After reviewing the complaint, we confirmed that Ava Walker eliminated Miss Isabelle Hale without reasonable basis and caused real harm to a young woman trying to enter finance."T

  • Stolen Grace   Chapter 3

    That night, I walked into a private club on the Upper East Side, all dark wood, old oil paintings, cigar smoke, and leather. It was the kind of place where old money and Wall Street power cut deals without leaving fingerprints.Henry Hale sat by the window. He had grown old and heavy, dressed in a dark gray suit with his tie knotted perfectly. Still, I recognized him at once. The brow, the eyes, the shape of his face. He looked almost exactly like the old photograph I had stared at for thirty years."Miss Walker." He didn't stand. He only lifted a hand.I sat across from him.He pushed a glass of whiskey toward me. "I looked into you. A girl from an Appalachian coal town. Scholarship to NYU. Then all the way to executive director at Northbridge. Impressive. I came from a place like that too. Talent matters, but opportunity matters more."He placed a card on the table. "Ease up on Isabelle, and I can recommend you to the Columbia Business School advisory council. If Northbridge raises a

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