My Ex Tried To Take Our Deaf Daughter At The Christmas Hotel Gala-lequyen994 - Chainityai

My Ex Tried To Take Our Deaf Daughter At The Christmas Hotel Gala-lequyen994

The Grand Ashford Hotel always made December look expensive.

Gold ornaments hung from a Christmas tree so tall it nearly brushed the balcony, and every polished laugh seemed to belong to someone who knew exactly where to stand.

Victoria Brennan knew where to stand too.

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She stood near the sponsor table in a crimson dress, one hand around a crystal glass she had not touched, the other wrapped around the small fingers of her daughter.

Sophie was seven years old, deaf, and wearing an emerald velvet dress she had chosen after twenty minutes of solemn consideration in front of her closet.

She also carried a worn teddy bear with one loose ear, because courage sometimes needs something soft to hold.

Victoria had built Brennan Technologies from a borrowed desk into a company the business magazines called unstoppable.

People praised her discipline, but they did not see the bedtime stories she missed or the way Sophie sometimes fell asleep waiting for her mother to come home.

That was why Victoria brought her that night, even after her assistant offered to babysit and her mother gently warned that the gala would be exhausting.

Victoria had almost agreed, but Sophie had stood at the bedroom door in that green dress, signing, “Can I see your Christmas work?”

So Victoria said yes.

For the first hour, Sophie stayed close and watched everything.

She could not hear the string quartet, but she felt the bass through the polished floor and read the shift in her mother’s shoulders whenever a conversation stopped being friendly.

Victoria signed when she could.

She promised they would leave early.

Then Colin Hale walked in.

He had been Victoria’s husband for nine years and Sophie’s father for four before he decided fatherhood had become too complicated.

When Sophie was diagnosed as deaf, Colin attended two appointments, learned three signs, and then began staying late at work with the wounded air of a man being asked to carry a tragedy.

Three years earlier, he packed two suitcases and told Victoria he could not spend his life “translating silence.”

Sophie still kept the birthday cards he mailed late.

Colin had no reason to be at the Grand Ashford gala except one.

Brennan Technologies had recently hired him as a consultant for a small acquisition review, a decision Victoria had fought and lost.

Now he stood twenty feet away in a gray suit, laughing with the same board members who had called the arrangement mature.

Sophie saw him and squeezed Victoria’s hand.

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