Chapter 370: Chapter 370
"Well, no problem then," Sandra said, her voice steadier now, carrying the quiet relief of someone who had just been told they weren’t going to have to carry an impossible burden entirely alone. "I will do exactly as you’ve said. I’ll move forward with the contract and I’ll make sure that we deliver something extraordinary." frёeωebɳovel.com
She reached for the ignition with one hand, preparing to finally drive away from this place and get started on everything that needed to happen immediately, but before she could end the call, Cora’s voice came through one more time with a very specific instruction.
"One more thing before you go," Cora said, and her tone had shifted into something more practical and pointed.
"You mentioned that you currently have three invitation cards for the event. I need you to go back to them and request four. Get four invitations from them - tell them the team size has expanded slightly to accommodate the increased scope, or whatever reasoning makes sense in the moment. Just make sure you secure that fourth card."
There was a brief pause, and then she added with quiet finality.
"And once you have all four, just leave the rest to me. I will handle it from there."
Sandra blinked once in mild curiosity but didn’t question it. If Cora wanted four invitations instead of three, then four invitations is what she would get. It was as simple as that.
"No problem," she said without hesitation. "I will do exactly as you’ve said. Four invitations. Consider it done."
And with that, the call ended.
The silence that filled the car in the immediate aftermath felt different from the silence that had filled it before - less suffocating, more manageable, like the air pressure had shifted just enough to allow Sandra to breathe properly again. She sat there for a few more seconds, her phone still in her hand, processing everything that had just transpired in the span of one very long and very consequential phone call.
Then she started the engine, pulled out of the driveway, and began the drive back toward her office where an enormous amount of work was waiting for her.
**
Meanwhile, in the elegant, softly lit interior of the space where Cora had taken the call, the atmosphere had shifted in its own distinct way.
Cora lowered her phone slowly from her ear and placed it down on the surface beside her with the careful, deliberate movement of someone whose mind was already several steps ahead, mapping out trajectories and contingencies and possibilities with the kind of precision that came from years of navigating complicated situations with grace and intelligence.
She took in a very deep breath - not out of stress or anxiety, but out of something closer to quiet satisfaction mixed with genuine surprise. Because what had just landed in her lap, completely unbidden and entirely by chance, was an opportunity she hadn’t even known existed fifteen minutes ago. An alternative route. A backup plan. A completely legitimate, unquestionable path directly into the very event that had been occupying so much of her strategic thinking for days now.
If Olivers plan worked - and she had every reason to believe it would - then wonderful. But if for any reason complications arose, if any aspect of that approach became compromised or blocked or more difficult than anticipated, she now had this. A set of invitation cards issued directly to her own company in its official capacity as the event organizer. Clean, legitimate, impossible to challenge.
It was, in every sense, perfect insurance.
At that moment, Oliver, who had been sitting across from her and watching her face throughout the entire second half of that phone conversation with the kind of quiet attention that people who know each other well tend to develop, leaned forward slightly and fixed her with a look of gentle concern.
"I hope whatever was being discussed on that call isn’t affecting you negatively," he said, his voice carrying genuine care beneath its curiosity. "Because I have to say, I could see a very sudden shift in your expression partway through. Something changed in your face, and I want to make sure you’re actually okay."
Cora turned to look at him directly, and the smile that spread across her face was small but genuine - the kind of smile that belonged to someone who had just been handed an unexpected gift and was still marveling at the timing of it.
"I’m fine," she said, shaking her head slightly. "Perfectly fine, actually. Better than fine, if I’m being completely honest with you."
Oliver raised an eyebrow, his curiosity clearly piqued now.
Cora leaned back slightly, folding her hands together in her lap as she delivered the news with the calm, measured pleasure of someone savoring a particularly satisfying turn of events.
"Penelope’s wedding invitation is now sitting in the palm of my hand," she said simply, letting the weight of that statement settle in the air between them. "And the truly remarkable part - the part I genuinely never saw coming - is how it arrived. I never imagined that we would be getting access to this event so easily, so cleanly, with absolutely no complications or questions attached to it."
She paused, shaking her head again with quiet disbelief.
"One of my own companies - the event design firm that I’ve been running through Sandra for years now - has just been awarded the full contract to organize and manage Penelope’s wedding. The interior decoration, the hosting, the coordination, everything. The entire event is now under my company’s direct control." Her smile widened just slightly.
"I had no idea when I woke up this morning that my own business was going to be handed the keys to exactly the place we’ve been trying to figure out how to access. I genuinely had no idea."
She looked at Oliver with an expression that was equal parts surprise and quiet satisfaction.
"So yes, I’m fine. I’m just surprised and, honestly, very happy about how this particular piece has fallen into place."