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The Gala

مؤلف: Rina Baldwin
last update تاريخ النشر: 2026-03-19 07:16:29

New York City. October. The Blackwell Foundation Gala. 8:51 PM.

Eleven days had passed.

Eleven days of being Vivienne Cole in every waking hour that wasn’t spent running Scarlett Voss’s actual life. Eleven days of accent work and background memorization and the particular mental discipline of inhabiting someone else so completely that the seams disappeared. Eleven days of reading Xavier Blackwell’s file until she could have answered questions about him in her sleep.

Eleven days of no further messages on the third channel.

You’re closer to him than you know.

She’d turned it over every day since. Every angle. Every possible reading. Closer to him than she knew — Xavier? The client? Someone in Xavier’s orbit whose connection to her own history she hadn’t identified yet?

Nothing.

She’d arrived at the gala at 8:51 PM.

Not fashionably late. Not conspicuously early. The precise window when the room had filled enough to enter without drawing attention but early enough that the social architecture hadn’t fully solidified. Groups still fluid. Conversations still forming. The moment before everyone locked into their evening’s orbit.

Vivienne Cole understood these things.

So did Scarlett Voss.

Tonight the distinction between them was the thinnest it had ever been at the start of a job.

She wasn’t sure what to do with that.

The ballroom was everything the Blackwell Foundation’s reputation suggested it would be.

Not excessive. Not the aggressive opulence of new money performing itself. Something older and quieter — a grand Fifth Avenue hotel that had been hosting the powerful and the beautiful since 1924, dressed tonight in warm light and the particular understated elegance of people who had never needed to announce anything.

She took a glass of champagne from a passing tray, sipped it once and got to reading the room.

The bartender near the east wall was watching the door more than his station which meant either he was expecting someone or someone had told him to watch for someone. She filed it. The cluster of men near the foundation’s acquisition display were politicians not collectors — the way they held their glasses, facing outward rather than inward, always aware of who was watching. Two security personnel she could identify operating in plainclothes near the north entrance. Good. Better than average.

She was forty seconds into the room and hadn’t found him yet. She turned toward the east gallery where the Blackwell Foundation’s most recent acquisitions were displayed and let the room continue behind her back.

And then she felt it.

Not his gaze. No she couldn’t have explained the distinction to anyone who hadn’t spent years doing what she did. But there was a quality of attention — specific, focused, different from the ambient social attention of a crowded room — that landed differently on the back of her neck.

Someone was watching her with intent.

She didn’t turn around.

She stopped in front of a large canvas. Dark, gestural, a painting that was doing something interesting with negative space and light. She looked at it with Vivienne Cole’s practiced curatorial eye and with Scarlett Voss’s actual aesthetic response which were, she was mildly surprised to discover, not entirely different things.

The Reyes commission, she thought, recalling the file. Foundation acquired it fourteen months ago. Controversial attribution. Xavier apparently argued for the acquisition personally against his own committee’s recommendation.

A man who trusted his own read over institutional consensus.

She worked the room for forty minutes.

Vivienne Cole was excellent company.

She spoke to a gallery director from Boston about acquisition trends in Latin American contemporary art and knew enough to be genuinely useful to him. She listened to a Swiss collector describe a recent purchase with the particular patience of someone who found other people’s enthusiasms inherently interesting.

She laughed at the right moments.

She asked the right questions.

She left each conversation with the other person feeling subtly, inexplicably better about themselves than when she’d arrived.

This was her father’s gift. The one she used every day and had never fully decided was a gift.

At the forty-two minute mark she moved toward the bar. A voice came from her left. Low. Unhurried. The faint trace of a British accent worn smooth by American years.

“The Reyes commission has a problem.”

She turned.

Xavier Blackwell was standing eighteen inches away. It wasn’t what she’d prepared for, nor was it the approach she’d mapped — she’d expected to engineer proximity, to create the moment, to control the entry point. Instead he was simply there, as though the space beside her had always been his and he’d merely been elsewhere temporarily.

He was looking at the bar, not at her. He was taller than the photographs had communicated. The photographs had communicated the stillness accurately though. In person it was more pronounced. The quality of a man who had long since stopped performing composure because composure had become structural. In between his fingers rested a glass of whiskey, no ice.

The Reyes commission,” she said, finding Vivienne’s mid-Atlantic register without effort. “What kind of problem?”

“Attribution.” He still hadn’t looked at her. “The committee that approved the acquisition didn’t examine the provenance chain past 1987. There’s a gap.”

“I know about the gap.” She kept her voice easy. “I advised the Hartwell collection against their Reyes acquisition last spring for the same reason. They bought it anyway. The Seoul sale is going to cause problems eventually.”

Now he looked at her.

She had prepared for this moment. She had looked at that photograph dozens of times. She had practiced her response to direct eye contact with a man whose eyes the photograph had described as unsettling.

The photograph had undersold it. They were much more grey, darker than she’d expected The particular quality of eyes that were running a continuous assessment behind whatever expression the face was offering — and the face was offering very little, which made the eyes more visible.

He looked at her for two seconds.

She held it for exactly two seconds before letting them drift naturally to the bar. And then back at him. She couldn’t afford to raise suspicions by staring too intently at him. Yes eye contact, but not too much.

Vivienne Cole,” she said, offering her hand.

He looked at it for one beat. One only. Then took it.

“Xavier Blackwell.”

His hand was warm. His grip measured. The handshake of someone with nothing to prove and no interest in proving it.

She let go at exactly the right moment.

“I know who you are,” she said lightly. “The Reyes commission is the reason I’m here. I’ve been trying to get in front of your acquisitions director for three months.”

“You’ve been looking at the east gallery.”

“I always look at the art before the people.” She tilted her head slightly. “The art doesn’t look back.” There was something imperceptible in his expression. Clearly her words had had an effect on him. She filed it.

Her father had taught her that silence was the most powerful conversational tool available. Most people couldn’t tolerate it. They rushed to fill it and revealed themselves completely in the process.

Xavier Blackwell did not rush to fill it.

He let it sit right back.

Oh, she thought, with a feeling she wasn’t going to name. You learned that from someone too.

They talked for twenty-three minutes.

She knew it was twenty-three minutes because she was tracking simultaneously on two levels — the surface conversation and the operational assessment running underneath it — and time was part of the operational layer.

The surface conversation covered the Reyes attribution, the foundation’s European acquisition pipeline, a disagreement about a contested work in the west gallery that escalated into something that felt — unexpectedly, inconveniently — like an actual argument.

She held her ground.

He held his.

Neither of them conceded until the evidence required it and when it required it they both moved without drama.

She hadn’t expected that.

She’d expected him to concede to avoid conflict, the way powerful men often did with women they wanted to impress, the smooth social accommodation that meant nothing. Or she’d expected him not to concede at all, the way powerful men often didn’t, the immovability that meant something different but was equally a performance.

He did neither.

He argued until the argument was over and then he was done arguing. She said something about the painting — the Reyes, the thing it was doing with negative space, the way it rendered loneliness as a location rather than a feeling — and it came out with more honesty than she’d intended. A real response not a performed one. The seam between Vivienne and Scarlett showing for a fraction of a second.

He caught it.

She saw him catch it.

His eyes shifted almost imperceptibly. The assessment recalibrated. And then his expression smoothed back and he responded to the surface of what she’d said rather than the layer underneath it.

He’d caught it and chosen not to use it.

She didn’t know what to do with that.

At minute twenty-three a man appeared at Xavier’s shoulder.

Cole Mercer.

She recognized him from the file. Former military intelligence. The notation that said do not underestimate in the tone of someone who’d learned it personally. He was in his mid-thirties, built with the economical solidity of someone whose physicality was a professional tool. He looked at Xavier briefly and then at Scarlett with an expression that was entirely neutral in the specific way that required training to achieve.

He was assessing her.

Excuse me,” Xavier said.

“Of course.” She said, coupled with Vivienne Cole’s easy smile. Warm and untroubled. Xavier held her gaze for one beat longer than the social moment required.

Then he walked away.

She turned back to the bar and picked up her water.

Her hands were steady.

She was very proud of her hands.

the fifty-eight minute mark she moved toward the east corridor.

This was reconnaissance only. She never moved on the first visit. Nine years and a clean record and the rule that protected both was simple — observe first, always. Map the space. Find the rhythms.

The corridor ran from the main ballroom toward the hotel’s private function suites. Beyond them, per the building schematics she’d memorized, the executive elevator bank. Xavier maintained a private suite on the fourteenth floor.

She walked slowly counting the cameras, noting the angles, marking the blind spot between the second and third sconce on the left wall where coverage overlapped imperfectly.

imperfectly.

She was almost at the end of the corridor when she heard footsteps behind her.

“The east corridor leads to the private suites.”

She turned.

Xavier was standing ten feet away, hands in his pockets, whiskey gone. The lower light of the corridor did something different to his face — all shadow and angles, those grey eyes steady on hers.

“I got turned around,” she said pleasantly.

“Did you.”

o have.

“I should get back,” she said.

She moved to walk past him.

“Miss Cole.”

She stopped and turned. He was looking at her with an expression she couldn’t read. And she could always read expressions. It was the one instrument that had never failed her in nine years.

“Your bracelet,” he said.

She looked down at her left wrist.

The thin diamond bracelet. The pawn shop in Chicago three years ago. The one object on her that belonged to Scarlett not Vivienne — too personal, too worn, the kind of thing you didn’t notice you’d put on until you were already in the car.

She’d noticed in the elevator and told herself it didn’t matter.

“It’s beautiful,” he said.

She looked up.

His eyes weren’t on the bracelet.

They were on her face.

And in them was something that stopped every rehearsed response she had. Not assessment. Not attraction. Not the social performance of a man making conversation.

Recognition.

The expression of someone looking at something they’ve been trying to identify for longer than they’d like to admit.

“Thank you,” she said.

Her voice was perfect.

Her pulse was not.

She walked away. Once she made it to the end of the corridor, out of his sight line, she stopped.

He knew.

She was certain of it now. Not theoretically. Not based on routing traces and lawyer names in databases. Certain in the way the body knew things before the mind caught up.

He knew who she was.

And he’d let her walk away.

Her phone buzzed in her clutch.

She opened it.

The third channel.

The one that had been silent for eleven days.

Three words.

Watch Cole tonight.

She stared at it before glancing at the end of the corridor. It was empty. Just warm light and the distant sound of the gala and the feeling of something assembling itself around her that had been assembling for longer than she’d known.

She looked at the message again.

Watch Cole tonight.

Not watch Xavier. Not get out. Not anything she would have predicted from a channel that had opened with you’re closer to him than you know.

Cole.

She put the phone away.

She walked back toward the ballroom.Toward the light and the noise and the crowd.

Thinking about a man with careful eyes who had looked at her with an expression she couldn’t read and said something about her bracelet that wasn’t about her bracelet at all.

And thinking about another man somewhere in this building.

Cole Mercer.

Whose sister had been used and burned.

Who had been at Xavier’s side for eight years.

Who the third channel apparently wanted her to watch tonight.

She walked back into the ballroom.

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