For a brief second, Charles felt a tightening in his chest. A warning. Be careful. He ignored it.
Two security guards approached, clearly uncomfortable.
“Ma’am,” one said gently, “Mr. Hayes has asked us to escort you outside.”
Margaret’s eyes sharpened. She’d grown up in the 1940s. She understood exactly what escort outside once meant.
“I never said I was leaving,” she replied softly. “I said I want to check my balance.”
Charles laughed again, louder. “See?” he announced. “This is why we have security—confused people trying to use services they don’t understand.”
A wealthy woman nearby—Catherine Vance—lifted her designer purse to hide her grin.
“Poor thing,” she said loudly. “Probably Alzheimer’s. My maid was like that.”
Then Margaret laughed.
Not gently. Not cruelly. Deeply. Her voice filled the marble hall.
“Alzheimer’s?” she said calmly. “That’s interesting—because I remember very clearly working fourteen-hour days cleaning your grandfather’s office in 1955.”
The lobby went silent.
Charles stiffened. His family had owned the bank since 1932. Very few people knew personal details about his grandfather.
“Excuse me?” he said, suddenly unsure.
“You were fifteen,” Margaret continued. “I worked after school so my mother and I could eat. Your grandfather used to leave lit cigarettes on the marble floor, just to see if I’d complain.”
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