“It’s not a game,” Greg cut in, too quickly.
That was telling.
He turned to me. “You’re bluffing.”
I held his gaze. “Am I?”
He leaned back, but the confidence was off now, slightly misaligned, like a tie pulled too tight. “Even if your company works with outside counsel, you wouldn’t be foolish enough to discuss confidential matters at a restaurant.”
“I’m not discussing the matter,” I said. “You are.”
Silence.
The waiter approached with the dessert tray, sensed the tension instantly, and backed away without a word.
My mother looked between us. “Greg?”
He ignored her.
I kept my voice even. “You’ve spent the last hour trying to humiliate me. Fine. But now you’ve openly suggested that rules at your firm are optional, that compliance barriers can be worked around, and that influence matters more than regulation. That might be empty bragging. Or it might be a very unfortunate statement made in front of the wrong person.”
My cousin Ethan blinked. “Wait. Is this, like… illegal?”
Greg snapped, “Stay out of it.”
There it was—the crack.
My mother turned fully toward him. “Greg, what is she talking about?”
He forced a laugh that sounded brittle. “Your daughter thinks she’s in a courtroom.”
“No,” I said. “I think you forgot that not everyone at this table is supposed to admire you.”
Then I did the part that actually unsettled him.
I stood up.
Not dramatically—just enough to reach for my coat and say, “I’m leaving. But before I do, let me make one thing clear: I have no interest in your job, your marriage, or your ego. I do, however, have professional obligations. So tonight would be a very good night for you to stop speaking.”
My mother stared at me, now angry because she could feel control slipping without understanding why.
“Sit down,” she said.
I looked at her. “You told me to stop making a scene. I did. He kept going.”
Greg rose halfway from his chair. “Claire, if you repeat any of this—”
I smiled then, small and cold.
“If?”
That single word landed harder than any speech could have.
He sat back down.
I picked up my purse, nodded once to the rest of the table, and walked toward the exit while their silence followed me through the restaurant.
I had just reached the lobby when my phone rang.
It was Greg.
I let it ring twice before answering.
His voice was lower now, stripped of its dinner-table confidence.
“What do you want?” he asked.
I stepped outside into the warm Carolina night and said, “An apology won’t be enough anymore.”
He didn’t come to my office the next morning.
My mother did.
Linda arrived at 9:15 in a cream jacket and oversized sunglasses, the uniform of a woman trying to appear composed while quietly unraveling. My assistant buzzed me first, uncertain. I told her to send her in.
She walked in without smiling.
“What did you do?” she asked.
I closed the file on my desk and looked at her calmly. “Good morning to you too.”
“Don’t be clever with me, Claire. Greg barely slept. He says you threatened his job.”
“I documented statements he made in public after spending an hour insulting me.”
“You know what I mean.”
I did.
After leaving the restaurant, I hadn’t contacted a regulator. I hadn’t broken privilege. I had done the only appropriate thing: I sent a carefully worded internal ethics note to lead counsel stating that, in a public setting unrelated to the engagement, an executive from the client had made remarks suggesting disregard for compliance functions and a potentially careless approach to regulatory obligations. No legal conclusions. No gossip. Just a record.
The lawyers took it seriously.
As they should have.