I arrived at my sister Emily’s wedding twenty minutes before the ceremony, wearing a simple navy dress and low heels, exactly the kind of outfit that made people underestimate me. That was usually useful. That afternoon, it became entertaining.
I’d chosen the dress on purpose—not because I didn’t own something more dramatic, or because I couldn’t afford diamonds that flashed under ballroom lights, but because I’d learned something early in my career: when people think you’re harmless, they show you who they really are. They talk too much. They brag. They reveal the soft parts of their ego like exposed wiring.
And once you’ve seen the wiring, it’s easy to shut the whole thing down.

The country club sat just outside Boston like it had always been there—white columns, manicured hedges, the kind of place where the pavement looks freshly cleaned and even the trees feel curated. A valet in white gloves opened car doors as if the guests were royalty. Soft instrumental music drifted through the open entryway. Everything smelled faintly of roses and money.
Leave a Comment