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The Blaque Standard

Maison Blaque Part 1

By Dakota Denise Published about 11 hours ago Updated about 9 hours ago 44 min read
Maison Blaque




THE BLAQUE STANDARD
Book |

✨ THE BLAQUE ATMOSPHERE

Members Only

Before you begin, pause.

This is not a casual read.

This is not something you skim between notifications or half-listen to while distracted.

The Blaque Standard is structured.

Layered.

Built with reinforcement beneath elegance.

And like anything built well, it demands presence.

So before you turn the page—

Set the room.

Dim the light if you can.

Clear the surface in front of you.

Sit up a little straighter.

Because you’re not just opening a book.

You’re entering a private house.




⚜ The Energy

This story moves like a tailored blazer sliding over bare skin.

Smooth at first.

Then you feel the weight of it.

It is not loud.

It does not beg.

It commands attention without asking for it.

It escalates quietly.

Tension builds in pauses. Power shifts in glances. Victory arrives controlled.

There is no chaos here without purpose.

There is no softness without spine.

If you rush it, you will miss what holds it together.

And this book?

Lives in what holds it together.




🌿 Optional Ritual

If you are 420-friendly, choose with intention.

This is not a haze book.

It is not meant to dull your edges.

It pairs best with something balanced.

Clear-minded. Measured. Present.

The kind of strain that lets you notice detail. The kind that sharpens dialogue instead of blurring it.

Early chapters — where ambition wrestles doubt — call for calm focus.

Courtroom chapters demand alertness.

The runway? That moment deserves whatever makes your pulse steady and your posture rise.

Luxury is not excess.

It is awareness.




🍷 If You Prefer Wine

Choose structure.

A deep red for tension. Something layered. Something with body.

Or champagne for controlled triumph.

Sip slowly.

Let the chapters breathe.

Notice how scenes tighten before they release.

This story unfolds the way oak ages in barrel — quietly, intentionally, with depth that reveals itself over time.



☕ If You Prefer Clarity
Not everyone needs smoke. Not everyone needs wine.
Some prefer stillness. Some prefer tea. Some prefer coffee. Some prefer nothing but quiet and intention.

You belong here too.
This story does not require alteration of your state.
It requires attention.
Brew something warm if that grounds you.
Pour sparkling water into a glass if ritual matters.
Light a candle instead of anything else.
Or simply sit in clean silence.
Luxury is not consumption.
It is awareness.
It is choosing how you enter a space.
However you arrive — steady, sober, reflective —
you are not missing anything.
You are exactly as present as this story requires.


🔥 What You’re About to Enter

This is not just fashion.

It is architecture.

It is ownership.

It is reputation defended without screaming.

It is family tension dressed in silk.

It is ambition wrapped in discipline.

And beneath every scene — there is reinforcement.

You may not see it immediately.

But you will feel it.




⚖ The Rule of This House

Nothing here is accidental.

Not the seam angles. Not the gold lining. Not the pauses in conversation. Not the way certain words land heavier than others.

This story is built the way a luxury garment is built:

Invisible strength first. Visible elegance second.

Read slowly when it tightens.

Read boldly when it escalates.

And if you feel the urge to:

Adjust your collar. Pour something intentional. Light something measured. Close the door.

That’s not distraction.

That’s immersion.




Now.

Take one steady breath.

Set the room.

Straighten your spine.

And step inside.




Chapter One begins.







Before the House Had Walls




The first time I realized Studio Blaque wasn’t enough, I was staring at a spreadsheet that would have made most people cry tears of gratitude.

Revenue was up.

Return customers were steady.

Our monochrome lounge set had sold out twice in a month.

Malik had texted me three champagne emojis and a screenshot of our backend analytics like he personally stitched every seam.

And I felt nothing.

Not nothing exactly.

More like… full.

Full in the way you feel after you’ve eaten something good but you know it wasn’t the meal you actually wanted.

I was sitting on my living room floor surrounded by samples — structured joggers in bone, cropped hoodies in matte charcoal, high-neck tees with the subtle Studio Blaque stitch along the hem. The pieces were clean. Elevated casual. Minimal. Intentional.

And still.

Not enough.

The afternoon light hit the fabric just right, and for a second everything looked expensive in the quiet way I liked. No loud logos. No screaming graphics. Just quality.

I ran my fingers along the stitching of a hoodie sleeve.

It was perfect.

And that irritated me.

My phone buzzed.

Malik.

“Why you quiet?”

I typed back: “I’m thinking.”

Three dots immediately.

“That’s dangerous.”

I rolled my eyes.

“I’m serious,” he sent. “Numbers look good. Don’t invent a problem.”

That’s the thing about older brothers. They think if you’re not bleeding, you’re fine.

“I’m not inventing anything,” I replied. “I just think this isn’t the final form.”

Pause.

Then: “You about to stress me out, aren’t you?”

Probably.

I set the phone down and stood up, walking over to the rack near my window.

Studio Blaque had been my baby. Elevated casual done right. Tailored joggers that actually held shape. Cropped hoodies that didn’t sag. Clean lines. Subtle cannabis-coded stitching that only people who knew, knew.

It was profitable.

Respected.

Mine.

But when I slipped on one of the blazers I’d been secretly sampling — something heavier, more structured, shoulders cut sharper than anything I’d released — my posture changed without permission.

That was the problem.

Studio Blaque made women comfortable.

This made them powerful.

And once you feel that difference?

You can’t unfeel it.



By the time Monica, Keisha, and Nia came over that evening, my living room looked like ambition had gotten into a fight with organization and neither one apologized.

Fabric swatches covered the glass coffee table.

A half-rolled blunt sat in the ashtray like it was waiting for direction.

My velvet couch — the expensive one nobody sits on correctly — was holding three sample blazers in bone, jet black, and a deep emerald I hadn’t decided was too bold or just bold enough.

I was barefoot in tailored Studio Blaque trousers and a silk tank, hair wrapped up, staring at the emerald blazer like it had personally offended me.

Monica walked in first, bonnet on, wine already in hand like she doesn’t respect the concept of arriving empty-handed.

“Did you eat?” she asked immediately.

“That wasn’t hello.”

“It’s never hello when you’re spiraling.”

Keisha followed, leggings too expensive for someone claiming to be “outside but healing,” hoodie from a man she absolutely should have blocked by now.

Nia came last, heels clicking like she might accidentally run into an ex in my hallway and needed to win just in case.

She stopped in the doorway.

“Why does it smell like stress and expensive fabric?”

“Because I’m evolving,” I said.

Keisha squinted. “That’s what people say before they quit something stable.”

“I’m not quitting.”

Monica took a slow sip of wine. “So what are you doing?”

I picked up the emerald blazer and held it up.

“This.”

They stared.

“It’s cute,” Keisha said carefully. “But what is it?”

“It’s not Studio Blaque.”

Silence.

Real silence.

Nia stepped closer, running her fingers along the shoulder seam.

“Oh,” she said quietly. “You’re not playing.”

“No,” I said. “I’m not.”



The thing about elevated casual is it’s forgiving.

Tailored joggers? They flatter most bodies.

Cropped hoodies? You can style them up or down.

But structured tailoring?

That’s commitment.

That’s measurement. That’s precision. That’s risk.

Monica sat down slowly.

“You’re building a house now,” she said.

“Yes.”

“And houses cost money.”

“Yes.”

“And you already make money.”

“Yes.”

“So why?”

Because I’m tired of being comfortable.

Because I want rooms I don’t have to shrink inside.

Because I’ve already watched what happens when things fall apart without structure.

But I didn’t say all that.

Instead, I said, “Because I can.”

Keisha laughed. “That’s not a reason.”

“It is for me.”




Later, when the wine was low and the blunt had done its job, my phone buzzed again.

Malik.

“Sales spike weird.”

I frowned.

“Weird how?”

“Traffic up. Conversion strange.”

I glanced at Nia, who was now scrolling like the internet personally offended her.

“Send link,” Malik added.

He didn’t explain further.

He never does.

That’s the other thing about Malik.

He doesn’t panic.

He observes.

Then he shows up.



I didn’t know it yet, but that night — in a room full of fabric and half-formed ambition — was the last night Studio Blaque would exist as it had.

Because once you see the house in your head, you can’t keep pretending a studio apartment is enough.

And I had already started building something bigger.

I just hadn’t told anyone what it would cost.





After the girls left, the apartment felt louder.

Not physically.

Emotionally.

Wine glasses sat half-finished on the coffee table. Someone had moved the emerald blazer and didn’t put it back exactly where I left it, which irritated me more than it should have.

I stacked the Studio Blaque samples carefully — joggers folded clean, hoodies aligned, tees smoothed flat — like I was putting a version of myself away for the night.

Studio Blaque had saved me.

That wasn’t dramatic.

It was fact.

When nobody in my family understood what I was building, Studio Blaque paid my rent.

When Vanessa said, “You should probably get something stable,” Studio Blaque wired stability into my account.

When Tasha laughed and asked, “So this is like weed clothes?” Studio Blaque sold out in twenty-four hours.

And still.

It wasn’t enough.

My phone buzzed again.

Malik.

“Call me.”

I sighed and pressed his name.

He answered on the first ring.

“You good?” he asked.

“Yes.”

“You lying?”

“No.”

He paused.

I could hear the faint crack of a can opening.

“Icehouse?” I asked.

“You know it.”

“Why are you in my backend analytics at ten o’clock at night?”

“Because I’m always in your backend analytics.”

That was true.

Malik had been my silent partner from the beginning. Quiet money. Quiet strategy. No ego. No announcement.

He never asked to be the face of anything.

He just made sure the foundation didn’t crack.

“Traffic spike coming from one source,” he said casually. “You planning a collab I don’t know about?”

“No.”

Another pause.

“Okay,” he said. “Just checking.”

He didn’t push.

He never does.

But the way he said it let me know he’d clocked something.

“You eating?” he asked suddenly.

“Why does everyone keep asking me that?”

“Because when you get quiet you stop doing basic human things.”

“I’m fine.”

“Mm.”

That “mm” meant he didn’t believe me.

It also meant he wasn’t going to argue tonight.

“You want me to come out there?” he asked.

“For what?”

“For vibes.”

I laughed despite myself.

“You live in Washington.”

“I have PTO.”

“You don’t use PTO.”

“I’m evolving.”

That made me smile.

But something in his voice told me he wasn’t joking.

“I’m fine,” I said again.

“I know,” he replied. “But you don’t have to be alone in it.”

And that’s the thing about Malik.

He never says too much.

But he always says enough.




I hung up and walked over to the rack again.

The emerald blazer.

The black one.

The bone-toned sample I’d stitched with my own hands weeks ago and never showed anyone.

I slipped the bone blazer on.

It fit like it had been waiting.

Shoulders clean. Waist cinched. Lines intentional.

Studio Blaque pieces were comfortable.

This?

This demanded posture.

I walked to the mirror and stared at myself.

I looked older.

Sharper.

Less forgiving.

My phone buzzed again.

Different name this time.

Zaria.

“You up?” she texted.

“Yes.”

“Can I come by?”

“It’s late.”

“So?”

Fair.

Twenty minutes later she walked in wearing one of my oversized Studio Blaque tees layered over structured trousers she’d cropped herself, edges frayed intentionally.

Her locs were pulled back messy. Eyes calm. Energy steady.

She didn’t greet me with noise.

She just looked around.

“You rearranged,” she said.

“Not yet.”

She walked over to the rack.

Touched the emerald blazer.

Then the black.

Then the bone one I was still wearing.

“You finally did it,” she said softly.

“Did what?”

“Stopped pretending.”

I looked at her.

She didn’t smile.

She didn’t need to.

Zaria had always seen through me.

She set her sketchbook down on the coffee table and flipped it open.

Pages of silhouettes.

Structured shoulders. Sharper seams. Longer lines.

“You’ve been drawing?” I asked.

“I’ve been watching.”

She turned the book toward me.

One of the sketches stopped me cold.

It was a blazer.

But evolved.

The waist cut cleaner. The shoulder line slightly extended. The seam detail deliberate.

And near the inside hem?

A tiny stitched sun.

I swallowed.

“You put that there?” I asked quietly.

She nodded.

“You always talk about her when you talk about building bigger.”

Her.

We never say her name loud at first.

It sits in the room before it’s spoken.

“Soleil would’ve loved this,” Zaria said gently.

The air shifted.

Soleil had renamed herself after the sun when she moved west.

Said if she was starting over, she wanted warmth in it.

She was loud. Brilliant. Too bright for some rooms. Too restless for others.

She left chasing something none of us fully understood.

And somewhere between reinvention and distance, we lost her.

I looked at the golden sun stitched in the sketch.

“Inside the lining,” Zaria said. “Not outside. Not for show.”

“For us,” I whispered.

She nodded.

“Structure doesn’t mean cold,” she added. “It just means supported.”

I sat down slowly.

“You think I’m crazy?” I asked her.

“For wanting more?”

“For risking what already works.”

She leaned back against the couch.

“If it can be copied, it wasn’t finished,” she said calmly.

That line stayed with me.

If it can be copied, it wasn’t finished.

Studio Blaque was polished.

Profitable.

Stable.

But it wasn’t finished.

Not for me.


---

Around midnight, Zaria fell asleep on the couch with her sketchbook open, pencil still tucked behind her ear.

I draped a blanket over her and stood alone in the quiet.

The bone blazer still hugged my shoulders.

In the kitchen light, it looked almost ceremonial.

I walked back to the mirror one more time.

Looked at myself fully.

Youngest of five. Not the favorite. Not the safe one. Not the quiet one.

The builder.

The one who didn’t disappear.

The one who chose structure.

I reached inside the blazer and imagined the lining.

Imagined a golden sun stitched near the seam.

Hidden.

Intentional.

Legacy without announcement.

My phone buzzed again.

Malik.

“One more thing,” the text read. “Whatever you about to do… do it big.”

I smiled.

He always knows.

I typed back:

“I’m building a house.”

Three dots appeared.

Then:

“Then stop calling it a studio.”

I looked around my apartment.

At the samples. At the sketches. At Zaria asleep. At the rack by the window.

And quietly, without announcing it, without posting it, without asking permission—

I decided.

Studio Blaque had been the beginning.

But I was building Maison Blaque.

And this time,

I wasn’t asking anyone if it made sense.





THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Two: Blood Before Business



I should have known the moment I decided to build something bigger, the past would show up to test the foundation.

The Ring notification came while I was mid-alteration.

I was in the studio, chalk dust on my fingers, adjusting the waist seam on the Sovereign sample. Bone wool. Structured shoulder. Clean line. No apology in the cut.

My phone buzzed once.

Then again.

Then again.

I ignored it.

When I’m building, the world waits.

Five minutes later, Malik texted:

“You expecting company?”

That made me pause.

I wiped my hands and opened the Ring app.

Vanessa stood at my front door.

Arms folded. Expression tight. Like she was there to audit something.

Behind her—

My mother.

Lorraine.

Cardigan buttoned wrong. Shoes practical. Standing upright.

The timestamp read 2:17 PM.

It was now 3:43.

I pressed play.

Vanessa rang once.

Waited.

Looked directly into the camera.

Then bent down and slid something under my door.

No second knock.

No call.

They left.

Three years.

And now she was “in the neighborhood.”

I locked the studio early.

The note was still under my apartment door.

Vanessa’s handwriting was sharp and slightly slanted, like it had somewhere to be.

We were in the neighborhood.
Mom wanted to see you.
Here’s the address.

No greeting. No explanation. No acknowledgment of three years of silence.

Just coordinates.




Three years ago, when Aunt Jackie got sick and couldn’t care for Mom anymore, I was out of town fixing a supplier issue for Studio Blaque. We were scaling. Orders had doubled. I was chasing something bigger than comfort.

When I came back—

Mom was gone.

Vanessa had moved her.

No address. No conversation. No warning.

Just moved.

And now—

We were in the neighborhood.

I didn’t change before I drove over.




Chapter Two – Blood Before Business

The house looked smaller than I remembered.

Not physically.

Emotionally.

Same brick. Same walkway. Same porch light that flickered like it always had. But something about standing there again felt like stepping into a version of myself I had already outgrown.

Vanessa opened the door before I knocked.

Of course she did.

She’d always liked control.

She wore beige. Structured cardigan. Neutral slacks. Hair pulled tight. The kind of outfit that says I’m responsible without saying I’m rigid.

“Didn’t expect you this early,” she said.

“You left a note,” I replied.

Her mouth twitched like she wanted to correct my tone.

Tasha’s voice floated from the living room.

“Who is it?”

Vanessa didn’t answer immediately.

“It’s Dakota.”

A pause.

Then, “Oh.”

That “oh” had history in it.

I stepped inside.

The house smelled like lavender cleaner and something simmering on low heat. Orderly. Contained. Carefully managed.

Like Vanessa.

Tasha was on the couch in soft gray sweats, scrolling her phone. She looked up once. Just once.

“You always doing something,” she said. “Heard about the rebrand.”

I hung my coat slowly.

“News travels.”

“Why fix what isn’t broken?” Vanessa added lightly. “Studio Blaque was doing fine.”

There it was.

The tone.

Not concern.

Assessment.

“I’m not fixing,” I said. “I’m building.”

Vanessa gave a thin smile.

“You never sit still.”

“I don’t plan to.”

Tasha snorted softly.

“Must be nice to have that kind of energy.”

I didn’t bite.

I’d learned not to.

Being the youngest never meant being small. It meant absorbing more than I should have, earlier than I should have.

Mom was in the dining room.

Lorraine.

She looked smaller too.

Not fragile.

Just… quieter.

Her eyes lifted when she saw me.

And they lit.

“There she is,” she said softly. “My baby.”

Vanessa shifted slightly.

I crossed the room.

“Hey, Mama.”

She grabbed my hand with surprising strength.

“You working too much,” she said.

I smiled. “Probably.”

She studied my face for a second too long.

Then—

“Soleil?”

The name floated out like it didn’t belong to the air.

Vanessa stiffened.

Tasha looked down at her phone again.

“It’s Dakota, Mama,” I said gently.

She blinked.

“Oh. Yes. Dakota.”

But her thumb rubbed against my wrist like she was remembering something golden.

I swallowed.

Because the past in this family didn’t stay buried.

It resurfaced in fragments.

Like that meeting.

I was thirty-three.

Mom still had her mind then

She called us all together.

No drama.

Just said she was tired of carrying secrets.

We sat around a table not unlike this one.

Vanessa upright. Tasha distant. Me curious.

Mom told truths she had been holding for decades.

Everyone had one.

Some small.

Some shattering.

Mine?

Two.

The man who raised me wasn’t my biological father.

And my birthday wasn’t November 1st.

It was October 31st.

Halloween.

I remember laughing at that one.

“Explains a lot,” I said.

Nobody else laughed.

Then came the other truth.

Michael.

Mom’s long-time “boyfriend.”

The man who had been around for years.

The man Vanessa had been working real estate projects with.

The man who—

I exhaled slowly.

Even now, the memory moved carefully.

Mom said he was my biological father.

Silence had swallowed the room.

Vanessa didn’t look surprised.

That’s what stuck with me.

Not shock.

Not confusion.

Recognition.

What followed wasn’t screaming.

It was denial.

Then admission.

Then denial again.

Conversations in corners.

Phone calls that stopped when I walked in.

Statements like:

“That’s not how it happened.”

“You’re misunderstanding.”

“You always twist things.”

And somewhere in that blur, the truth settled in my bones.

Vanessa and Michael had crossed lines.

Whether she wanted to know he was my father or not, whether she claimed she didn’t know—

The timeline didn’t matter.

The denial did.

I didn’t explode.

I didn’t fight.

I stepped back.

Distance is quieter than confrontation.

And far more permanent.

Mom squeezed my hand again.

“You always had a strong back,” she murmured.

Vanessa cleared her throat.

“We’re not rehashing old things,” she said.

I looked at her calmly.

“I didn’t bring it up.”

Tasha shifted.

“You left,” she said. “You stopped coming around.”

“Yes.”

“You act like you’re above us.”

“No.”

I paused.

“I act like I prefer peace.”

Vanessa folded her hands neatly.

“You isolate when things don’t go your way.”

“I separate when things aren’t honest.”

That landed heavier.

Mom looked between us, confused for a moment.

Then she smiled at me again.

“My ambitious one,” she whispered.

Vanessa’s jaw tightened.

There it was.

That old current.

Not hatred.

Competition.

It had been there long before business.

Long before Maison.

Long before the rebrand.

I stood.

“I didn’t come to argue,” I said. “I just wanted to see her.”

Tasha scoffed softly.

“You always doing too much.”

I smiled.

“And it keeps working.”

Vanessa’s voice followed me toward the door.

“So what’s this new thing called again?”

I turned.

“Maison Blaque.”

She nodded slowly.

“Sounds expensive.”

“It is.”

A beat.

“For those who understand structure.”

She didn’t respond.

I stepped outside into clean air.

My phone buzzed.

Malik.

You good?

I looked back at the house once.

Yes.

Just remembering why I build the way I do.

Because chaos is loud.

But structure?

Structure survives it.

I walked to my car.

Maison wasn’t about money.

It wasn’t about validation.

It was about reinforcement.

When your foundation cracks early—

You learn to build differently.





My phone buzzed again before I even unlocked the car.



Malik:
You still at Vanessa’s?


Just left.


Alive?

Physically.


That bad?


Not bad. Just… predictable.

Three dots appeared immediately.

Did she do the voice?


Which one?


The calm superior one like she’s the HOA president of the family.

I laughed out loud.


Yes. Full cardigan energy.


I KNEW IT.


Tasha was there too.


Of course she was. The assistant hater.


Don’t start.


I’m not starting. I’m observing.

I leaned back in the driver’s seat but didn’t turn the key yet.


Mom called me Soleil.

There was a pause this time.

Longer.


She knew it was you though?


Yeah.


Then that’s what matters.

Another pause.


Vanessa say anything slick?


Just the usual. “Why change something that works.” “You never sit still.”


Translation: You’re outgrowing us and I don’t like it.


You’re messy.


No. I’m accurate.

I shook my head.

You think I do too much?




No ... And are You going to the studio later?


Yeah.


Good.


Why?


Because you get sharp after family visits.


Is that a bad thing?


No.

A pause.


It’s when you do your best work.

I turned the key in the ignition.

The engine hummed steady.


I’m done shrinking.


Good.


Maison Blaque isn’t small.

Neither are you.

Another message popped in before I could respond.


And for the record?


What now?


You’re not the black sheep.


What am I then?


You’re the only one who stopped pretending the house wasn’t crooked.

I sat there for a second.

Then typed:

Meet me at the studio.


Already on my way.

I pulled out of the driveway without looking back.

Some people build houses.

Some people build stories.

I build structure.

And structure doesn’t argue with instability.

It outlasts it.

Reflection:


I didn’t go inside the studio immediately.

I parked outside and let the engine idle for a few seconds longer than necessary.

The building looked the same as it always did.

Clean glass. Matte black door. Gold lettering steady and centered.

Studio Blaque.

For now.

Family has a way of shrinking you if you let it.

Of making you feel like you’re still sitting at a table where secrets fall out sideways and nobody claims what they broke.

But I wasn’t eighteen anymore.

I wasn’t thirty-three sitting at a family meeting while truths rearranged the air.

I wasn’t waiting for someone to clarify identity.

I was building it.

I flipped the visor down and studied my reflection.

Blazer sharp. Jaw steady. Eyes clear.

Vanessa always mistook distance for weakness.

Tasha mistook silence for insecurity.

They both mistook my absence for confusion.

It wasn’t confusion.

It was boundary.

There’s a difference.

Mom calling me Soleil lingered in my chest.

Golden sun.

Light that keeps rising even when it shouldn’t.

I closed the visor slowly.

Maison wasn’t rebellion.

It wasn’t revenge.

It wasn’t competition.

It was reinforcement.

When your foundation cracks early, you don’t build lighter.

You build stronger.

My phone buzzed.

Malik.

You good?

I typed back:

Always.

I turned the engine off.

Stepped out.

Straightened my blazer.

And walked toward the door.

Inside, business waited.

And business?

Doesn’t care about family history.

It cares about structure.





THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Three: Rooms That Don’t Respect You




The first time I said “Maison Blaque” out loud in a room full of men who controlled fabric distribution, they looked at me like I’d just ordered steak at a vegan restaurant.

We were in a glass-walled conference room with beige walls and ambition that smelled faintly of burnt coffee. Three men. Two open laptops. One legal pad. One polite smile that had probably survived twenty years of startup optimism.

I wore the black Sovereign sample.

Structured shoulder. Cinched waist. Dominion trousers tailored high enough to remind you posture is optional until it isn’t.

Hair pulled back. Minimal jewelry. No softness.

“Tell us about Studio Blaque,” the lead manufacturer said.

He didn’t say Maison.

He said Studio.

On purpose.

“Studio Blaque is profitable,” I said evenly. “Elevated casual. Strong margins. Loyal base. Low return rate. Efficient supply chain.”

He nodded slowly.

“And now you want to pivot.”

“I want to evolve.”

“To… couture?” he said, carefully.

I smiled.

“No. To structure.”

Silence.

“And this is still… in the cannabis space?” he asked, like he was stepping around something sticky.

“It’s in culture,” I corrected. “Not novelty.”

One of the other men scribbled something down like I’d said something academically confusing.

“Luxury consumers,” the first one continued, “don’t typically associate cannabis with refinement.”

I folded my hands on the table.

“Luxury consumers associate refinement with confidence. My customer already knows who she is.”

They blinked.

“Your current demographic may not follow you into higher price points.”

“That’s okay,” I said calmly. “Growth isn’t a group project.”

The man on the left coughed into his fist to hide a laugh.

The lead leaned back.

“Scaling from elevated casual into luxury tailoring is ambitious.”

“Disciplined,” I corrected.

He smirked faintly.

“Disciplined is expensive.”

“Yes,” I said. “That’s usually how standards work.”

That one landed.

He closed his laptop halfway.

“Minimum order quantity would be five hundred units per style.”

“Per size run?” I asked.

“Yes.”

“That’s inefficient for a launch house.”

He raised an eyebrow.

“Launch house?”

“Maison Blaque,” I said clearly this time.

He let the word sit in the air.

“You don’t have heritage,” he said finally. “Luxury houses typically emerge from atelier culture.”

“I’m building an atelier.”

“With what staff?”

“With structure,” I replied.

Silence.

They recalculated again.

“You built Studio Blaque digitally,” he continued. “Luxury is experiential.”

“Yes,” I said. “That’s why I’m building it physically.”

“And you’re prepared for the risk?”

“I’ve already taken the safe route,” I said. “Comfort is more dangerous.”

One of them leaned forward.

“You seem very certain.”

“I don’t confuse preparation with arrogance,” I replied.

The room shifted slightly.

“Your association with cannabis could limit wholesale placement,” he added.

“Then I’ll build placement,” I said.

“That’s not simple.”

“Neither is tailoring.”

That did it.

They stopped smiling.

“Pricing would need to triple.”

“I don’t build anything that can’t justify its price.”

“Your current customers—”

“Will either grow with me or remember where they started.”

He watched me for a long moment.

“Why not keep the Studio name?” he asked. “It already works.”

Because I’m not building a studio anymore.

“Houses aren’t studios,” I said simply.

That one stayed in the room.

He finally nodded.

“We’ll send revised terms.”

The meeting ended politely.

No enthusiasm. No applause. Just evaluation.

When I stood, the Sovereign held its shape like it was aware of the room it had just survived.



Outside, the air felt sharper.

Malik texted before I even reached my car.

“How bad?”

“They said cannabis and luxury don’t belong in the same sentence.”

Pause.

“They say that about a lot of things before they make money off them,” he replied.

“They raised minimums.”

“Expected.”

“They think my customers won’t follow.”

“Some won’t.”

“I didn’t blink.”

“I know.”

That made me smirk.

“You always in my backend.”

“That’s what silent partners do.”

Pause.

“You feel small?”

I leaned against the car and looked at the sharp shoulder line of the blazer.

“No,” I said. “I felt early.”

Malik laughed.

“Different.”

“Yes.”



Dinner that night was necessary.

We met at a spot with low lighting and overpriced cocktails that made people feel important.

Keisha arrived first, wearing a cropped Studio Blaque set in charcoal paired with heels that looked like they had opinions.

“You look like you terminated somebody’s contract,” she said when I sat down.

“Just their assumptions.”

Monica walked in next, softened blazer over a slip dress, gold hoops glinting under dim light.

“You wore black,” she observed.

“It was strategic.”

Nia slid into the booth last in a charcoal Sovereign sample I hadn’t officially released.

Sleeves rolled. Collar sharp. Girlfriend texting her every three minutes.

“You look like you billed somebody emotionally,” Nia said.

“I might have.”

We ordered drinks.

I told them about the meeting.

The careful way they said cannabis. The ambitious comment. The five hundred unit minimum.

Keisha slammed her glass down lightly.

“They love to say ambitious when they mean ‘how dare you.’”

Monica nodded. “Men hear structure and think threat.”

Nia leaned forward.

“What did you say when they questioned price?”

“That standards cost money.”

Keisha gasped dramatically.

“NOT STANDARDS COST MONEY.”

Monica laughed into her drink.

“See? This is why you scare them.”

“I don’t scare them,” I said.

“You absolutely do,” Nia replied. “You sit there calm while dismantling them with full sentences.”

Keisha pointed at me.

“Did you do the eyebrow thing?”

“What eyebrow thing?”

“The one where you lift it slightly when you know you right.”

“I don’t do that.”

All three of them stared at me.

“You do,” Monica said softly.

I ignored them.

“They said I should keep Studio Blaque,” I added.

Keisha leaned back.

“They always want you to stay where they met you.”

Monica stirred her drink slowly.

“Why does it bother them that you’re evolving?”

“Because evolution implies you were right the first time,” Nia said.

Keisha grinned.

“Or because they didn’t see it coming.”

A server dropped off our drinks.

Keisha raised hers.

“To being early.”

Monica lifted hers.

“To standards.”

Nia smirked.

“To rooms that don’t know what to do with us.”

We clinked glasses.

Then Keisha leaned closer.

“So… unrelated. You still seeing that art gallery girl?”

I blinked.

“Why are you like this?”

“I’m asking because if she can’t pronounce Maison Blaque correctly, she gotta go.”

Monica laughed.

“You don’t even know if she’s serious.”

“She not serious,” Keisha said confidently. “Dakota not serious.”

“I am serious,” I said.

“About what?” Nia asked.

“Structure.”

They groaned collectively.

“You cannot flirt by explaining tailoring,” Keisha said.

“Watch me,” I replied.

We dissolved into laughter that shook the table.

For a moment, it wasn’t about manufacturers. Or minimums. Or polite dismissal.

It was just us.

Sharp. Ambitious. Unapologetic.

Later that night, alone in the studio, I stood in front of the rack again.

Bone. Black. Emerald.

I slipped my hand inside the lining of the newest sample.

The tiny golden sun stitched near the seam caught the light.

Hidden. Intentional. Legacy.

They didn’t respect it yet.

That was fine.

Respect follows proof.

And I had never built anything that asked to be understood first.




THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Four: Public Reaction



I didn’t announce Maison Blaque like a spectacle.

No dramatic music. No countdown. No “big reveal” video with smoke and slow motion.

Just a black screen.

White serif font.

Studio Blaque is evolving.
Welcome to Maison Blaque.

Underneath it—

A single photo.

The Sovereign.

Black wool. Sharp shoulder. Waist cinched like it understood discipline. Minimal. Clean.

And if you looked closely—

A hint of gold lining inside the sleeve.

Nothing loud. Nothing explanatory.

I hit post at 9:02 a.m.

Then I put my phone face down on the cutting table.

And waited.




By 9:05, the vibration started.

Not dramatic. Not explosive.

Just steady.

The kind of steady that means conversation, not celebration.

I picked the phone up.

First came the loyalists.

🔥🔥🔥
CEO energy.
Okayyyyy this looks expensive.
Drop date?
We ready.
This grown.

Then the confusion.

Wait.
Is Studio gone?
Why change the name?
I liked the hoodies.
This don’t look like weed.
Is this still for us?

There it was.

The line underneath the question.

Is this still for us?

I stared at that one longer than the others.

Then came the familiar phrase.

Why fix what isn’t broken?

Different accounts. Same tone.

Why fix what isn’t broken?

I didn’t respond.

I refreshed.




Industry accounts picked it up by noon.

Not Vogue. Not glossy.

But the mid-tier fashion commentary pages that think they’re tastemakers.

“Streetwear Brand Attempts Luxury Pivot.” “Cannabis-Coded Couture?” “Ambitious Rebrand.”

Ambitious again.

The word followed me like it was trying to shrink something.

One account posted a screenshot of the Sovereign with the caption:

“This feels expensive.”

That one wasn’t shade.

It was caution.

Another comment:

“Is this still for the culture or is she trying to go high-end?”

Trying.

Interesting word choice.



Malik called at 12:14 p.m.

“You good?” he asked.

“Define good.”

“Traffic up 46%. Site retention higher than last drop. Comments heavy but conversion steady.”

I leaned against the cutting table.

“They loud?”

“Loud,” he confirmed. “But they browsing.”

“And Studio customers?”

“Split,” he said. “Some excited. Some confused. Some think you abandoning them.”

I’m not abandoning anyone,” I said.

“You upgraded the house,” he replied. “Some people liked the apartment.”

I smiled despite myself.

“Analytics don’t lie,” he continued. “Curiosity is up.”

“And doubt?”

“Also up.”

“Balance,” I said.

“Pressure,” he corrected.

He wasn’t wrong.




Zaria was sitting cross-legged on the floor near the rack, sketchbook open, headphones on.

She hadn’t looked at her phone once.

“You see the comments?” I asked.

She shook her head without looking up.

“Don’t need to.”

She turned the sketchbook toward me.

The Sovereign in emerald this time.

The golden lining more pronounced. The sun stitch refined. Cleaner.

“Heirloom,” she said simply.

I nodded.

“People think expensive means exclusion,” she continued. “It doesn’t.”

That was too wise for someone who still forgot to eat lunch.

“Draw the atelier version,” I told her.

She didn’t ask questions.

She just drew.




Keisha, on the other hand, was fully activated.

My phone buzzed with a screenshot.

Keisha: WHO IS THIS MAN.
Screenshot: “This ain’t the brand I signed up for.”

Keisha: I WILL FIGHT HIM.

I called her immediately.

“Do not fight strangers on my behalf.”

“He said you switching up!”

“I am switching up.”

“He said it like an accusation!”

“It’s an evolution.”

Keisha inhaled dramatically.

“You want me to argue professionally or petty?”

“Neither.”

Silence.

“Fine,” she sighed. “But if somebody call you ambitious one more time, I’m logging in.”

I laughed.

“I can handle ambitious.”

“I know you can,” she said. “I just don’t like how they say it.”




Around three, Monica texted.

“You ate?”

I ignored that part.

“Rebrand looks clean,” she followed up. “Grown. Don’t let comments make you second guess.”

“I’m not,” I replied.

“You always say that.”

“Because I’m not.”

Three dots appeared.

Then:

“Just remember — people don’t like when you grow in front of them.”

That line stayed with me.

Growing in private feels safe.

Growing publicly feels like a challenge.




By late afternoon, the tone had shifted again.

The confusion started turning into curiosity.

Zoom-ins on the lining. Screenshots of the sleeve. Speculation about the gold stitch.

“What’s the symbol?” “Is that a sun?” “Is that new?” “Maison what?”

One comment read:

“This don’t look like weed anymore.”

I typed a response. Deleted it. Typed again. Deleted it.

Finally, I posted one line in the comments:

“Luxury doesn’t have to announce itself.”

No emoji. No explanation.

Just that.

The comment section quieted slightly.

Not supportive.

Not hostile.

Measured.




At six, I closed the laptop.

Not because I was done.

Because the energy felt different now.

Heavier.

More watchful.

The racks in the studio looked sharper under the overhead lights.

Bone. Black. Emerald.

The word Maison in my bio no longer felt theoretical.

It felt like a line drawn in ink.

Zaria packed up her sketchbook.

“You ready?” she asked.

“For what?”

“For people to test it.”

I looked at the Sovereign again.

“They already are.”

She nodded once.

No drama. No fear.

Just fact.




Later that night, the girls met at Monica’s house.

Her kids ran through the living room wearing old Studio Blaque tees tied at the waist like capes.

“Maison now,” Keisha corrected loudly.

“They six,” Monica replied. “They don’t care.”

Nia was scrolling.

“You trending on Fashion Thread,” she said.

“That good?”

“It’s… discussion.”

Keisha leaned over her shoulder.

“Oh they mad-mad.”

“What now?” I asked.

“They saying you skipping steps.”

“I built the steps,” I replied.

Monica handed me a glass of wine.

“You knew this would happen.”

“Yes.”

“You scared?”

“No.”

Nia looked up slowly.

“Good. Because you don’t look scared. You look expensive.”

Keisha raised her glass.

“To confusing people.”

Monica lifted hers.

“To not shrinking.”

Nia smirked.

“To being misunderstood and paid anyway.”

We clinked.

Laughed.

But underneath the laughter?

We all felt it.

Pressure.

Not scandal. Not sabotage.

Yet.

Just attention.

And attention?

Attracts everything.

Support. Doubt. Competition.

And somewhere in that algorithm—

Someone watching closely.



Back at the studio, alone, I stood in front of the rack one more time.

Ran my hand inside the lining of the emerald sample.

The golden sun caught the light.

Hidden. Intentional. Legacy stitched where only the wearer feels it.

Public reaction wasn’t applause.

It was assessment.

That was fine.

Because I hadn’t built Maison Blaque to be understood immediately.

I built it to last.

And longevity?

Always makes people uncomfortable first.





THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Five: The Undercut




The first DM came at 8:17 a.m.

“Is this yours?”

Attached was a screenshot.

At first glance, it looked familiar.

Black structured blazer. Cinched waist. Sharp shoulder.

Too familiar.

I zoomed in.

The seam was wrong.

The cut slightly off at the hip.

The lining? Flat.

No gold. No sun. No intention.

But from a distance?

Convincing.

The caption under the screenshot read:

“New drop from House Noir Atelier.”

I blinked once.

House Noir.

Maison Blaque had been public for twelve days.

Twelve.

Zaria walked into the studio carrying coffee.

“You look like you saw a ghost,” she said.

“Not a ghost,” I replied. “A copy.”

I handed her the phone.

She studied it quietly.

“They rushed it,” she said immediately.

“How can you tell?”

“The shoulder line dips too low. And the waist seam isn’t reinforced. It’ll collapse after two wears.”

She zoomed further.

“They didn’t understand the structure.”

That made my jaw tighten.

Understanding isn’t required to replicate a silhouette.

Just access.

My phone buzzed again.

Another DM.

“Why does this look like yours?”

Another screenshot.

Different color. Same cut.

House Noir Atelier.

I searched the account.

Private. New. Three posts. Thirty-eight thousand followers.

That was not organic.




Malik called before I could.

“I see it,” he said.

“How?”

“I track keyword spikes. House Noir just tagged you indirectly.”

“Indirectly?”

“They used ‘house.’”

I exhaled slowly.

“They moved fast.”

“Too fast,” he replied. “Which means they were watching.”

The room felt smaller.

Not panicked.

Alert.

Zaria set her coffee down.

“They copied the outside,” she said calmly. “Not the inside.”

I looked at her.

“And what’s inside?”

She smiled slightly.

“The standard.”




By noon, the comments started.

Under my post.

“This looks like House Noir.”

“Did you collab?” “Who did it first?”

There it was.

The narrative shift.

Not support. Not confusion.

Competition.

I didn’t comment.

I didn’t post a story.

I didn’t react.

I called Simone Ellis.




Simone didn’t answer on the first ring.

She answered on the second.

“Dakota,” she said evenly. “What happened?”

That’s why I liked her.

No small talk.

No performance.

“I need you to look at something.”

“Send it.”

I forwarded screenshots.

Three minutes later, she called back.

“They copied the silhouette,” she said calmly. “But not the stitch.”

“They don’t know about the stitch.”

“They don’t have to,” she replied. “Silhouette similarity is enough to muddy perception.”

She paused.

“Did you file?”

“Trademark pending on the name. Design protection on the Sovereign in progress.”

“How far?”

“Early.”

Silence.

Then:

“Send me your original sketches. Time stamps. Manufacturing communications. All of it.”

I closed my eyes briefly.

“They moved fast.”

“Yes,” she said. “Which suggests prior exposure.”

The word hung between us.

Exposure.

Simone continued.

“I’ll draft a cease-and-desist. Quiet first.”

“Quiet?”

“You don’t want a public fight yet,” she said. “You want control.”

She was right.

“I’ll come by this afternoon,” she added.

“You don’t have to.”

“I do.”

She hung up.




At 2:36 p.m., the studio door opened.

Simone Ellis does not enter rooms.

She claims them.

She wore a custom corset under a structured blazer suit in deep charcoal — cut from my own Sovereign sample fabric. High-waisted trousers. Minimal heel. No wasted lines.

She looked like litigation in motion.

“You look expensive,” Zaria muttered.

“I bill accordingly,” Simone replied.

She placed her leather folder on the cutting table and surveyed the rack.

“So,” she said calmly. “They rushed.”

“Yes.”

“They underestimated.”

“Yes.”

She turned to me.

“Do not react publicly.”

“I wasn’t planning to.”

“Good.”

She flipped open her folder.

“House Noir was registered three weeks ago.”

Three.

“Before Maison launched publicly.”

“Yes.”

The room went very still.

Zaria stopped sketching.

“Three weeks,” I repeated.

Simone met my eyes.

“Which means they were watching before you announced.”

My chest felt tight but steady.

“Old contact?” she asked carefully.

“Possibly.”

She nodded once.

“We’ll handle it quietly.”

“Cease-and-desist?”

“Yes.”

“And if they ignore it?”

She closed the folder gently.

“Then we escalate.”

No drama. No raised voice.

Just escalation.




My phone buzzed again.

Unknown number.

I let it ring.

Simone glanced at it.

“Answer,” she said.

I did.

Silence.

Then a voice.

“You move fast.”

I didn’t ask who it was.

“I move intentionally,” I replied.

A soft laugh.

“It’s just business.”

“No,” I said calmly. “It’s structure.”

Click.

I hung up.

Simone didn’t ask who it was.

She didn’t need to.

“Save that number,” she said.

“I did.”

She adjusted her sleeve.

“People copy when they think visibility equals vulnerability.”

“And?”

“And they forget documentation exists.”




By evening, House Noir had posted another photo.

Same silhouette. Different model. Caption: “Original design. Timeless cut.”

Original.

I stared at it for exactly ten seconds.

Then I turned off my phone.

Because panic is public.

And I don’t panic publicly.

Zaria walked over and held up her latest sketch.

Emerald. Sharper. Higher shoulder. Sun stitch refined.

“They can’t copy what they don’t understand,” she said quietly.

I nodded.

She was right.

They copied the outside.

Not the intention. Not the discipline. Not the lineage stitched inside.

Simone stood by the rack, running her hand along the Sovereign’s shoulder.

“They underestimated you,” she said.

“No,” I replied calmly.

“They underestimated the standard.”

She smiled slightly.

“Good.”

She gathered her folder.

“I’ll send notice tonight.”

When she reached the door, she paused.

“Do not shrink,” she said without turning around.

“I won’t.”

The door closed softly behind her.

The studio felt different now.

Not shaken.

Activated.

This wasn’t scandal.

Not yet.

It was an undercut.

A test.

And I had already decided—

Comfort had been taken once.

Structure would not be.

I walked to the rack and slipped my fingers into the lining of the Sovereign.

The golden sun caught the light.

Hidden. Intentional. Untouched.

They could copy the outline.

But they could not copy the standard.

And that?

Was about to matter.




THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Six: Leverage




The cease-and-desist went out at 9:14 p.m.

Certified. Digital. Delivered.

Simone didn’t dramatize it.

She sent it like she was mailing a birthday card.

Precise. Tracked. Recorded.

I didn’t sleep much that night.

Not because I was panicking.

Because my brain doesn’t power down when something threatens structure.

By 7:02 a.m., House Noir had posted again.

Not defensive.

Strategic.

A black-and-white photo of their blazer. Caption:

“Some silhouettes are timeless.”

No tag. No direct mention.

Just implication.

Keisha sent it immediately.

“They playing in your face.”

I didn’t respond.

I forwarded it to Simone instead.

Her reply came in less than three minutes.

“Expected.”




At 10:18 a.m., a buyer officially paused.

Not the small one.

The larger one.

The one we’d been quietly negotiating placement with.

Email subject line: Clarification Needed.

“We value innovation, but due to similarities circulating online, we’ll need confirmation of design originality before proceeding.”

Innovation.

Originality.

Confirmation.

The words stacked clean and corporate.

I stared at the screen.

Not shaken.

Not surprised.

But aware.

Pressure had moved from comments to contracts.

Simone arrived before noon.

Matte bone Sovereign. Corset structured beneath. Hair pulled back tight. No wasted motion.

She didn’t ask how I was.

She set her leather folder on the cutting table.

“They responded,” she said.

I nodded once.

“And?”

“They deny infringement. Claim independent development. And they are requesting proof of prior design timeline.”

My chest tightened slightly.

“I documented recent drafts.”

How recent?” she asked calmly.

“Two years.”

She didn’t react immediately.

“That may not be sufficient.”

Zaria stopped sketching.

“Why?”

“Because visual similarity isn’t judged by last season,” Simone explained. “It’s judged by origin.”

Origin.

The word settled heavier than expected.

“They’re also positioning publicly,” she continued. “Subtle. Calculated. They want you emotional.”

“I’m not emotional.”

“I know,” she said. “But they want you to appear emotional.”

Malik texted at the exact same moment.

“How loud they getting?”

I ignored it for now.

Simone opened her folder.

“Next step is documentation,” she said. “Manufacturing correspondence. Draft history. Timestamped sketches. Anything that establishes first creation.”

“I have files.”

“Bring everything.”

Zaria stood slowly.

“They copied the outside,” she said quietly.

“Yes,” Simone replied. “But court cares about timeline, not feelings.”

Silence.

The studio felt tighter.

Controlled.

Simone walked to the rack.

Examined the Sovereign again.

“They moved fast,” she said.

“Yes.”

“Too fast.”

She turned toward me.

“Which suggests prior awareness.”

The word exposure hovered without being spoken.

I felt the anger rise again.

Not explosive.

Sharp.

“I don’t want a public fight,” I said.

“You won’t have one,” she replied. “You’ll have a paper fight.”

That felt colder.

Better.




My phone buzzed again.

Vanessa.

I let it ring.

Then texted:

“Saw something online. This what happens when you do too much.”

I stared at it.

Then locked the phone.

Some people mistake ambition for instability.

Simone watched me carefully.

“Family?” she asked.

“Yes.”

“Do not let outside noise influence legal response.”

“It won’t.”

She nodded once.

“Good.”




By late afternoon, House Noir’s counsel sent formal response.

Professional. Polished. Dismissive.

They demanded proof.

They implied defamation risk if accusations were made publicly.

They offered private resolution again.

Simone read it silently.

“They think you’ll protect brand image over confrontation,” she said.

“I won’t settle.”

“I didn’t ask if you would.”

She closed the folder.

“They’re escalating strategically. We do the same.”

Malik texted again.

“You good?”

This time I responded.

“Yes.”

“You sure?”

“Yes.”

“Need me?”

I stared at the screen.

Not yet.




Zaria placed a new sketch on the table.

Not Sovereign 2.0 yet.

Just refinement.

Higher shoulder. Stronger spine.

“They’re watching silhouette,” she said softly. “So we shift posture.”

Simone glanced at it.

“Smart.”

I looked between them.

Law and design.

Strategy and structure.

“They want speed,” Simone said. “You give them patience.”

“They want reaction,” Zaria added. “We give them evolution.”

The room steadied.

Not calm.

Prepared.



That evening, the internet tone sharpened.

Not louder.

Sharper.

“House Noir did it cleaner.” “Maison reaching.” “Who copied who?”

I didn’t comment.

I didn’t post.

I didn’t defend.

Because defending publicly is weakness when paperwork is coming.

Simone packed her folder.

“I’ll draft amended notice,” she said. “But I need deeper documentation.”

“I’ll pull what I have,” I replied.

She paused near the rack.

“They believe your timeline is short.”

I looked at the Sovereign.

“They’re wrong.”

She studied my face for a second.

“Then prove it.”

She left.

The studio went quiet.

Malik called instead of texting.

“You sound tight,” he said.

“I’m fine.”

“You got that tone.”

“What tone?”

“The one where you calculating instead of reacting.”

“That’s a problem?”

“No,” he said calmly. “That’s why I asked if you need me.”

I hesitated.

Not because I was unsure.

Because I don’t like needing.

“I’m pulling files tonight,” I said.

“Pull everything,” he replied.

Silence.

“You remember when you first drew that structured blazer?” he asked casually.

“Yes.”

“You still got that?”

“Probably.”

“Probably ain’t enough.”

I felt something shift.

“What do you mean?”

“Nothing,” he said lightly. “Just saying.”

He hung up before I could press further.

I stared at the rack again.

Bone. Black. Emerald.

Golden sun stitched inside.

Hidden. Intentional.

House Noir was betting on timing.

On visibility. On pressure.

They didn’t know what existed before visibility.

And for the first time since this started—

I felt something else beneath the anger.

Memory.

If they wanted origin—

We would give them origin.





THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Seven: Receipts




Malik texted at 6:12 a.m.

Open your door.

I stared at the message.

Why?

Just open it.

When I opened the door, he was standing there in a hoodie and joggers that looked casual but weren’t cheap, duffel bag slung over his shoulder, Icehouse tall can in hand like it was carry-on compliant.

“You flew in with beer?” I asked.

“I don’t trust regional options,” he said calmly.

He stepped inside and looked around like a building inspector.

“You look stressed.”

“I’m not stressed.”

“You look like you’re pretending not to be stressed.”

“I’m not pretending.”

He squinted at me.

“You got that ‘I’m fine’ fine.”

I walked past him toward the kitchen.

“What are you doing here?”

He followed.

“You think I flew down here for nothing?” he said, cracking the can open. “You Got Some Gas Money then? You think I just woke up and said ‘Let me spend $500 and TSA energy for fun?’”

I laughed despite myself.

“Stop.”

“No, I’m serious,” he continued. “You think I came down here for the complimentary peanuts?”

“You’re dramatic.”

“I’m invested,” he corrected.

He dropped his duffel near the couch and walked toward the garment rack like he was drawn to it.

Bone. Black. Emerald.

He touched the shoulder of the Sovereign.

“This what they copied?”

“Yes.”

He studied it quietly.

“They did it wrong.”

“You can tell?”

“Of course I can tell,” he said. “This one stands up by itself. Theirs look like it need encouragement.”

I shook my head.

“Focus.”

“I am focused,” he said calmly. “That’s why I know it’s wrong.”

He looked at me again.

“You good?”

“Yes.”

“You sure?”

“Yes.”

“You mad?”

“Yes.”

“Good.”

That made me pause.

“Good?”

“Yes,” he said. “Mad means you care. Care means it’s yours.”




By ten, we were at the studio.

Malik didn’t sit.

He paced.

He looked at racks. At sketches. At the cutting table like he was calculating angles.

Zaria glanced at him once.

“You loud thinker?” she asked.

“Strategic thinker,” he corrected.

She went back to sketching.

“You don’t need to do all that,” I told him.

“Yes, I do,” he replied. “Because if somebody moved this fast, they had confidence.”

“Or arrogance.”

“Confidence,” he said. “Arrogance is sloppy. This was calculated.”

Before I could respond, Simone walked in.

Matte black Sovereign. Custom corset structured beneath it. Shoulders sharp. Waist clean. Power quiet.

She didn’t greet anyone.

She assessed.

“You must be Malik,” she said.

“You must be expensive,” he replied.

She didn’t smile.

“I bill accurately.”

He nodded approvingly.

“I like her.”




We gathered at the cutting table.

Simone opened her folder.

“They’ve retained counsel,” she said calmly.

The air shifted slightly.

“And?” I asked.

“They deny similarity. Claim independent development. They’re requesting evidence of your design timeline.”

Malik stopped pacing.

“Good,” he said.

Simone looked at him.

“Good?”

“Yes.”

She turned back to me.

“They’re also offering mutual settlement. Both brands continue without public dispute.”

I felt the anger rise again.

Sharp. Contained.

“I’m not settling,” I said.

Simone nodded once.

“Understood.”

She continued.

“They believe timing protects them.”

“Timing?” Zaria asked quietly.

“They launched close enough to your announcement to blur origin,” Simone explained.

Malik leaned against the table.

“They betting on memory,” he said.

Simone glanced at him again.

“And documentation,” she added pointedly.

I folded my arms.

“I documented everything recent.”

She tilted her head slightly.

“How recent?”

“Two years.”

She didn’t react.

“That may not be enough.”

Silence.

The room felt smaller for a second.

Malik watched me carefully.

“You sure that’s all?” he asked.

“Yes.”

He studied my face.

Then looked at Simone.

“Hypothetically,” he said slowly, “if something predates two years… significantly…”

Simone’s eyes sharpened.

“How significantly?”

“Like,” he said casually, “back when she wouldn’t shut up about structured weed couture and people laughed at her?”

My stomach tightened.

“Malik.”

He ignored me.

“You remember that?” he asked me.

“Yes.”

“You emailed me drafts.”

I blinked.

“What?”

Simone went still.

“What drafts?” she asked calmly.

Malik walked toward his duffel bag.

“You think I came down here for vibes?” he said again, softer this time. “You think I spent $500 for emotional support?”

He unzipped the bag.

Pulled out a thick accordion file.

Worn. Heavy. Organized.

He placed it on the cutting table.

“You forget ideas,” he said. “I archive them.”

The room went quiet.

He opened the first folder.

2014.

Printed emails. Sketch attachments. Date stamps.

Structured blazer. Cinched waist. Annotated shoulder measurements.

Before Studio Blaque. Before digital drops. Before hoodies.

Simone stepped closer slowly.

“These are dated.”

“Yes.”

“Email timestamps intact?”

“Yes.”

“Attachments preserved?”

“Yes.”

Zaria leaned in.

“That’s version one,” she whispered.

I felt something shift inside me.

Not panic. Not rage.

Relief.

Malik flipped another folder.

2015.

Interior sun stitch concept. Handwritten note.

Gold lining — symbol of light inside structure.

Simone looked at me.

“This predates them by years.”

“By ten,” Malik corrected.

Silence.

Heavy. Important.

Simone closed the folder gently.

“They don’t know this exists.”

“No,” Malik said calmly.

I sat down slowly.

Because the anger I’d been holding wasn’t needed anymore.

Not like that.

This wasn’t about reaction.

This was about record.

Simone’s tone shifted slightly.

“We amend response immediately,” she said. “Exhibit timeline. Force disclosure.”

“Discovery?” I asked.

“Yes.”

Malik almost smiled.

“That’s when they sweat.”

Zaria placed Sovereign 2.0 beside the 2014 sketch.

Past. Present.

Lineage.

“They copied evolution,” she said softly. “Not origin.”

Simone nodded.

“And origin wins.”

House Noir could posture online. They could talk innovation. They could bait reaction.

But paper?

Paper doesn’t care about tone.

Malik looked at me.

“You thought I flew out here for nothing?”

I shook my head slowly.

“I didn’t know.”

“You don’t have to know everything,” he said. “That’s what silent partners for.”

Simone gathered the folders carefully.

“We don’t announce this,” she said firmly. “We file.”

I nodded.

Malik picked up the original 2014 sketch again.

“You remember when you drew this?” he asked.

“Yes.”

“You were mad weed fashion was lazy.”

“I still am.”

He nodded.

“Good.”

He placed it back carefully.

“Chaos took enough,” he said quietly.

I looked at the rack.

Bone. Black. Emerald. Sovereign 2.0.

I slipped my fingers into the lining.

The golden sun caught the light.

Documented. Dated. Defensible.

They copied the outline.

But they didn’t know the outline had roots.

Ten years deep.

And roots?

Don’t panic when the wind picks up.

They anchor.






THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Eight: West



West was always a direction before it was a place.

Soleil used to say that.

“West means you’re going somewhere,” she told me once, leaning against my old kitchen counter, hair dyed a copper shade that looked expensive in the sunlight and reckless at night.

She was never reckless.

She was searching.

There’s a difference.




Malik was asleep on my couch when the memory hit.

Icehouse can empty on the coffee table. Shoes still on. TV playing quietly to no one.

The studio was dark except for the lamp near the rack.

Bone. Black. Emerald.

I stood there longer than I meant to.

Soleil would have loved the emerald.

Said it looked like money trying to behave.

We lost contact before California.

That’s the part nobody talks about.

Not the drugs. Not the hotel. Not the ending.

The drifting.

The slow separation that feels temporary until it isn’t.

She called less. Texted less. Started saying “I’m good” in a tone that meant “don’t ask.”

I was building Studio Blaque at the time.

Learning suppliers. Managing orders. Chasing something steady.

She was chasing light.

West.

When she moved to California, she said it like it was destiny.

“I need sun,” she told me. “I need somewhere that don’t remember me.”

I should have flown out there.

I should have called more. I should have insisted. I should have—

Should is a useless word when time has already passed.

The last real conversation we had, she asked me something strange.

“You ever think about building something nobody can take?”

I laughed at the time.

“Like what?”

“Like a house,” she said. “Not a place. A structure.”

I didn’t understand what she meant.

I do now.




Zaria came into the studio early the next morning.

She didn’t say good morning.

She never does when she’s thinking.

She placed a new sketch on the cutting table.

“Look,” she said.

Sovereign 2.0.

The shoulder lifted slightly higher. The waist seam reinforced. The sleeve tapered cleaner.

And inside—

The golden sun moved.

Not hidden at the hem anymore.

Centered along the interior spine of the blazer. Running vertical.

Subtle. But undeniable.

“You moved it,” I said.

She nodded.

“It shouldn’t hide,” she replied.

The room went quiet.

“You sure?” I asked.

“Yes.”

Her voice didn’t shake.

“She shouldn’t hide.”

That’s when I realized she wasn’t just redesigning the blazer.

She was anchoring memory.

Soleil wasn’t loud. She wasn’t spectacle. She wasn’t chaos.

She was warmth.

And warmth doesn’t belong at the bottom seam.

It belongs at the core.



Malik walked in mid-sketch, rubbing his face.

“You redesigning already?” he asked.

“Yes,” Zaria replied calmly.

He picked up the sketch.

Studied it.

Then looked at me.

“You putting her in it?” he asked quietly.

“Yes.”

He nodded once.

“Good.”

No jokes. No Icehouse commentary.

Just good.



I hadn’t talked about Soleil publicly.

Not because I was ashamed.

Because grief is not branding.

And the world does not deserve access to everything sacred.

But the golden sun had started asking questions.

Is that new? What does it mean? Why gold?

I stood in front of the rack.

Slipped my fingers into the lining of the original Sovereign.

The tiny sun stitched near the seam.

Hidden.

Safe.

Then I looked at Zaria’s redesign.

Vertical. Centered. Present.

Soleil died alone in a California hotel.

That sentence never stops feeling unnatural.

Alone.

Fentanyl.

West.

We didn’t know she’d drifted that far until it was too late.

Zaria found out online.

I found out through a call that started with, “I’m sorry.”

I remember standing in my kitchen with fabric spread across the table.

Measuring tape around my neck.

World suddenly rearranged.

Chaos doesn’t ask permission.

It takes.

And after that day, I started building differently.

Less trendy. More structured.

Less spontaneous. More intentional.

Because chaos had already taken something from me.

I would not let it take anything else.




By noon, I made the decision.

Not a dramatic announcement. Not a story-time post.

Just a clean image of the Sovereign 2.0 lining.

Gold sun centered. Vertical.

Caption:

“For the ones who went West.”

No explanation.

No hashtag.

No marketing copy.

I posted it and locked my phone.

Zaria watched me.

“You sure?” she asked.

“Yes.”

Malik stood by the rack.

“She would’ve liked that,” he said.

“I know.”

We didn’t cry.

Grief doesn’t always look like collapse.

Sometimes it looks like clarity.



Simone called that afternoon.

“You just shifted the narrative,” she said calmly.

“How?”

“Emotion changes leverage.”

“I didn’t post for leverage.”

“I know,” she replied. “But it strengthens you.”

She paused.

“House Noir filed another motion.”

“Let them.”

“You sound steady.”

“I am.”

Because this wasn’t about them anymore.

Not fully.

It was about why I built structure in the first place.

Structure is protection.

Structure is memory held upright.

Structure is refusing to let chaos rewrite your design.




That evening, the comments were different.

Quieter.

Less confused. Less skeptical.

People didn’t know the whole story.

They didn’t need to.

But they felt it.

“This feels deeper.” “Gold is powerful.” “This is personal.”

Yes.

It was.

Zaria stood beside me, arms folded.

“You think they understand?” she asked.

“No,” I said honestly. “But they don’t need to.”

She nodded.

Sovereign 2.0 hung between bone and emerald like a bridge.

Malik walked over and adjusted the hanger slightly.

“Make it centered,” he said.

“It is centered,” Zaria replied.

He squinted.

“Emotionally centered.”

She laughed softly.

“I think it is.”

I stepped back and looked at the rack.

Bone. Black. Emerald. And now—

Gold at the core.

House Noir could copy silhouette.

They could posture online. They could escalate legally.

But they could not copy lineage.

They could not copy loss. They could not copy the reason behind the structure.

Soleil went West searching for sun.

I built it into the lining.

Not to market. Not to mourn publicly.

But to anchor something that almost drifted away.

Zaria placed the final sketch on the table.

Sovereign 2.0 complete.

Stronger. Cleaner. Unmistakable.

“Ready?” she asked.

“Yes.”

Because building structure isn’t about control.

It’s about protection.

And I had already decided—

Nothing else leaves West without being stitched into something that lasts.


THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Nine: The Appearance



The courthouse smelled like polished wood and quiet intimidation.

Marble floors. Echoing heels. Low conversations that never reached full volume.

House Noir arrived first.

Of course they did.

Three-piece suits. Muted navy. Gray. Predictable confidence.

They looked corporate.

They looked safe.

They looked like they thought this was already handled.

Then we walked in.

Not together.

Not dramatically.

Sequentially.

Intentional.



I entered first.

Bone Sovereign.

Not white. Not cream.

Bone.

The kind of color that says I’m not here to blend in, but I’m not here to shout either.

Structured shoulders. Waist pulled tight. Gold spine lining hidden. Hair slicked back. No excessive jewelry. Just small gold studs.

My heels hit the marble slow. Measured.

Every step controlled.

Then Simone.

Matte black Sovereign with corset integrated so seamlessly you couldn’t tell where structure ended and armor began.

Her blazer cut sharper than mine. Longer lapel. Waist severe. Trousers tapered with no break at the ankle.

She carried no large bag. Just a slim leather portfolio.

She did not smile.

She did not scan the room.

She walked like it already belonged to her.

Behind her—

Malik.

Emerald Sovereign. Single-breasted. No tie. Dark shirt underneath.

The green wasn’t flashy. It was deep. Forest. Old money energy.

He didn’t look amused today.

No Icehouse. No jokes.

He looked like a man who archives everything.

Zaria came next.

Shortened Sovereign in slate gray. Cropped slightly at the waist. Sleeves tailored tighter. Wide-leg trousers.

She wore the gold sun as a pin today.

Not hidden.

Centered on her lapel.

Subtle. But deliberate.

Monica arrived in soft ivory.

Her version more relaxed. Blazer draped slightly. Waist defined but not severe.

Married energy. Mother energy. Boardroom-but-I-have-kids energy.

She looked stable.

Keisha?

Deep wine.

Structured but cut higher at the hip. Sharper hemline. Confidence aggressive but controlled.

Divorced-and-outside energy.

Nia entered in midnight blue.

Double-breasted. No shirt under the blazer. Just clean skin and a thin gold chain.

Lesbian dominance in a courthouse hallway.

Effortless. Unbothered.

House Noir finally looked up.

And that’s when I saw it.

Not fear.

Calculation shift.

Because this wasn’t one designer defending herself.

This was a brand ecosystem.

Coordinated. Unified. Structured.

We didn’t match.

We aligned.




Inside the courtroom, wood benches creaked softly.

The judge entered.

Middle-aged. Measured eyes. No nonsense.

“Counselors,” she said.

Simone stood first.

Her voice was steady. Low. Precise.

“Your Honor, we are here regarding expedited motion on design infringement and discovery timeline.”

House Noir’s counsel stood next.

Corporate. Controlled. Dismissive tone just beneath polite.

They argued similarity was coincidence. Silhouette evolution common. Industry standard.

Simone did not interrupt.

She waited.

Then:

“Your Honor, we have submitted exhibits documenting initial design concepts dated ten years prior to defendant’s market entry.”

The word ten landed heavy.

House Noir’s counsel shifted.

Only slightly.

But I saw it.

Simone continued.

“Email timestamps. Draft attachments. Interior stitch concepts documented years before public release.”

Zaria’s fingers tightened around her lapel where the gold sun sat.

Malik sat still.

Emerald sharp against the wood bench.

House Noir’s founder finally looked directly at me.

I held his gaze.

Did not blink.

Did not smile.

The judge flipped through pages.

Silence stretched.

Then:

Discovery will proceed,” she said calmly. “Defendant to produce internal development timeline within thirty days.”

Thirty days.

House Noir’s counsel tried to object.

Denied.

Clean.

Controlled.

Simone nodded once.

No celebration. No smirk.

Just acknowledgment.




When court recessed, the hallway felt different.

Not loud.

Heavy.

House Noir exited first this time.

Not slow. Not confident.

Just… first.

We remained.

Malik finally leaned toward me.

“They thought you was new.”

I didn’t answer.

Zaria adjusted her sleeve.

“They didn’t know about origin.”

Monica exhaled slowly.

“That was clean.”

Keisha whispered, “I wanted more drama but I respect it.”

Nia smirked.

“This was hotter.”

Simone turned to me.

“This isn’t victory,” she said calmly. “This is leverage.”

“I know.”

She studied me.

“You did well.”

“I didn’t speak.”

“You didn’t need to.”

That’s when I did something intentional.

I unbuttoned my blazer.

Just slightly.

Enough for the gold spine lining to show when I shifted.

The sun caught the courthouse light.

Not flashy.

But undeniable.

House Noir’s founder saw it.

Recognition flickered.

Not of grief.

Not of symbolism.

Of documentation.

Of timestamp.

Of proof.

Malik noticed.

“You petty,” he murmured.

“Structured,” I corrected.

We exited together this time.

Not rushed.

Not triumphant.

Aligned.

Different colors. Different cuts. Same silhouette.

Maison Blaque didn’t show up to argue.

We showed up to exist.

And existence— documented, structured, intentional—

is louder than defense.

THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Ten: Manufacturer Punks



Discovery does not look dramatic.

It looks like spreadsheets.

It looks like metadata.

It looks like timestamps most people would scroll past.

Simone called at 7:32 a.m.

Her tone was different.

Not urgent.

Contained.

“I need you at the studio,” she said.

No explanation.

I didn’t ask for one.



When I walked in, Malik was already there.

No Icehouse.

That’s how I knew it was serious.

Emerald Sovereign again. Sleeves rolled slightly. Jaw tight.

Zaria sat at the cutting table, laptop open, sketchpad untouched.

Simone stood near the garment rack.

Matte black Sovereign. Corset structured. Energy colder than usual.

“Sit,” she said.

I did.

Simone turned the laptop toward me.

An email chain.

Not mine.

House Noir’s production submission.

Obtained through preliminary disclosure compliance.

Most of it redacted.

Except for one thing.

File origin metadata.

Pattern creation software tag.

Subcontractor ID.

My stomach dropped slowly.

Not panic.

Recognition.

“That looks familiar,” Malik said quietly.

It was.

Very familiar.

The same subcontracted pattern group I’d contacted two years ago when exploring small-batch structuring.

The same one that said:

“Minimum order 500 units.”

The same one that reviewed my annotated shoulder reinforcement draft.

Simone spoke evenly.

“They did not copy your public release.”

Silence.

“They copied your pre-production draft.”

Zaria’s fingers tightened around the edge of the table.

“That draft never went public.”

“No,” Simone replied.

“It went to them.”

The air in the studio shifted.

Not explosive.

Dense.

I replayed the memory.

Email inquiry. Attachment sent. Structural notes included. No NDA signed.

Because at that time—

I was still learning.

“Can we prove this?” I asked.

Simone nodded once.

“The metadata confirms pattern architecture matching your early reinforcement structure.”

Malik leaned forward.

“They didn’t even change the seam logic.”

“No,” Simone said. “They adjusted aesthetics. Not construction.”

Zaria finally spoke.

“They kept the spine.”

“Yes,” Simone replied.

They kept the spine.

My spine.

The reinforced internal angle I obsessed over for tension control.

Not visible to customer. Not flashy.

Technical.

Intentional.

Copied.



I didn’t yell.

I didn’t slam anything.

I stood up slowly and walked to the rack.

Bone. Black. Emerald. Sovereign 2.0.

I slipped my hand into the lining.

Golden sun steady.

“They thought small brand meant disposable,” Malik said.

Simone corrected him.

“They thought small brand meant unprotected.”

I exhaled slowly.

“So what happens now?”

Simone closed the laptop gently.

“Now,” she said, “we expand.”

“Expand what?”

“Defendants.”

The word hit clean.

Not just House Noir.

The subcontractor.

The manufacturer.

The pattern group.

Anyone in that chain who handled your draft.

Malik’s jaw flexed.

“They sold access.”

“Yes,” Simone said.

Zaria’s voice stayed calm.

“They didn’t just copy design.”

“No,” Simone replied. “They copied labor.”

That landed harder.

Because structure isn’t just lines on paper.

It’s hours. Iterations. Failures. Revisions.

They didn’t steal a look.

They stole work.



My phone buzzed.

Keisha.

“Tell me we’re suing everybody.”

I didn’t answer.

Monica texted right after.

“You good?”

Nia:

“Say the word and I’ll pull up.”

I locked the phone.

“This isn’t loud,” I said quietly.

“No,” Simone replied. “This is surgical.”

She opened her folder.

“We amend the complaint to include misappropriation and trade practice violations.”

Malik leaned back.

“They think we small.”

Simone looked at him.

“They miscalculated.”

I turned back to the cutting table.

Pulled the original draft from the folder Malik brought in Chapter 7.

2014.

Shoulder reinforcement notes.

I placed it beside the House Noir pattern snapshot.

Same internal angle.

Different fabric.

Same spine.

“They didn’t even understand it,” Zaria said softly.

“No,” I replied.

“They just replicated it.”

Simone gathered the documents carefully.

“This will not resolve quickly,” she said.

“I know.”

“It will cost time.”

“I know.”

“It will escalate.”

I nodded.

“I know.”

She studied me for a moment.

“You’re not reacting.”

“No.”

“Why?”

Because chaos already took something from me.

Because structure matters.

Because this isn’t ego.

It’s foundation.

“They messed with the wrong archive,” Malik said quietly.

Simone allowed herself the smallest smile.

“Yes,” she said.

“They did.”

Later that evening, I stood alone in the studio.

No noise. No scrolling.

Just the rack.

Bone. Black. Emerald.

The golden sun caught the low light again.

They copied the outside.

They stole the inside logic.

But they didn’t understand why it was built that way.

And that?

Is the difference between trend and legacy.

I adjusted the hanger slightly.

Centered.

“Manufacturer punks,” Malik muttered from behind me.

I didn’t turn around.

“Documented punks,” I corrected.

He laughed softly.

And for the first time since this started—

I wasn’t thinking about proving myself.

I was thinking about precedent.

Because this isn’t just about one blazer.

It’s about what happens when emerging designers stop being disposable.

And start being defended..

THE BLAQUE STANDARD

Chapter Eleven: Public Record

The story didn’t explode.

It spread.

Slow. Intentional. Like oil in water.

The first article hit at 9:06 a.m.

Not viral. Not dramatic. Trade press.

The kind of article pattern-makers read over coffee. The kind buyers skim between fittings.

“Maison Blaque Expands Legal Claim, Citing Structural Pattern Evidence.”

Structural.

Pattern.

Evidence.

Not emotional words. Dangerous words.

Malik was already in the studio when I walked in.

Emerald Sovereign today — but altered. Double-breasted. Shoulders broader. Waist sharper. Black shirt beneath buttoned to the throat.

He didn’t look like my brother.

He looked like a board member.

“It’s moving,” he said quietly, eyes on analytics.

“How fast?”

“Trade forums first. Pattern boards second. One of the technical designers flagged the forty-five-degree seam reference.”

Zaria didn’t look up from the cutting table.

Slate gray Sovereign, sleeves cropped tighter, gold sun pin centered and larger than before.

“They’re dissecting architecture,” she said.

Architecture.

That’s when you know it’s not gossip.

By noon, it crossed into mainstream digital fashion.

“Independent Designer Alleges Structural Misappropriation by House Noir.”

Independent.

Alleges.

By three, business outlets reframed it.

“Supplier Integrity Under Scrutiny in Expanding Fashion Dispute.”

Integrity.

That word makes investors call lawyers.

I wore bone Sovereign 2.0.

Shoulders lifted. Waist carved. Silk in muted gold beneath.

The lining flashed gold when I moved — vertical spine visible if someone looked long enough.

Not flashy. Intentional.

The phone didn’t stop vibrating.

Keisha first.

“Say the word and I will comment like a lady with teeth.”

“Don’t,” I said.

Monica next.

“Ivory today. Showing up if needed.”

Nia.

“I already drafted twelve responses. Deleted all.”

Vanessa.

Of course.

Not to me.

Under the article.

“People need to stop acting like ideas don’t overlap. She’s always taken things too far.”

Always.

Taken.

Things.

Too far.

Keisha FaceTimed immediately, deep wine Sovereign sharp at the hip, sleeves pushed up, hoops glinting.

“She playing in your name.”

“I know.”

She always do this when you about to win.”

Monica texted again.

“Silence is louder.”

She was right.

Vanessa didn’t want truth.

She wanted reaction.

Then she went Live.

Soft lighting. Measured voice.

“I love her, but sometimes she turns things into bigger battles than necessary.”

Fashion ain’t that serious.

That part hurt less than I thought it would.

Because this wasn’t about fashion.

This was about structure.

And she’d never respected that.

At 8:47 p.m., the settlement offer arrived.

Thick paper. Seven figures. Licensing opportunity. Collaborative capsule. Non-disclosure agreement.

Simone read it standing.

Matte black Sovereign longer cut today. Corset integrated so cleanly it looked skeletal. Hair pulled tight. No jewelry. No softness.

“They want this buried,” she said.

Malik leaned against the rack.

“They nervous.”

“They’re calculating,” Simone corrected.

“What happens if I sign?” I asked.

“You get paid,” Simone said evenly. “They retain credibility.”

“And if I don’t?”

“We continue.”

Zaria finally spoke.

“They think this about money.”

It wasn’t.

“I don’t want hush money,” I said.

Simone’s eyes sharpened.

“What do you want?”

“Precedent.”

The room stilled.

Malik nodded once.

“Good.”

Simone folded the offer.

“I’ll decline.”

Two days later, the manufacturer cracked.

They always do.

Subpoena pressure smells like liability.

Supplemental disclosure arrived with a quiet email from their counsel.

Simone opened it without ceremony.

Then turned the laptop toward us.

Highlighted line.

“Understood. Use their internal seam logic. Adjust exterior silhouette.”

Use their internal seam logic.

My seam logic.

Forty-five-degree reinforcement angle. Concealed shoulder stabilization. Waist tension hold.

Not visible. Not trendy. Structural.

“They kept the spine,” Zaria whispered.

Simone nodded.

Fiction

About the Creator

Dakota Denise

Every story I publish is real lived, witnessed, survived, by myself or from others who trusted me to tell the story. Enjoy 😊

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