To Arthur Sterling, I was a stereotype with a convenient face: the “gold digger” who found his soft-spoken son and aimed straight for the family fortune.
He thought he could end my engagement with one dramatic gesture and a little humiliation.
He was wrong—because he never asked the only question that mattered: what kind of power I actually had.
Page 1 — The Dinner Where I Was Put On Trial
The private room at L’Orangerie smelled like truffle oil, polished leather, and generational money.
Arthur Sterling sat at the head of the table like a man born to be obeyed—tailored suit, calm smile, practiced contempt.
Beside him, his wife Eleanor watched quietly, blinking too slowly for comfort. Across from him, Liam—my fiancé—looked like he wanted to disappear into the linen tablecloth.
And then there was me. Sophia. The “problem” they were here to solve.
“So,” Arthur said, cutting his steak with surgical precision. “Liam tells me you work from home. On a laptop.”
He said “laptop” the way some people say “scam.”
I kept my posture relaxed. “Yes. I run a technology company. Financial infrastructure.”
