She Saved Twelve Seats, Then Her Brother Tried To Steal The Deal-Tep

I saved twelve seats for my family the night I launched Clear Path Living.

Not two.

Not a polite little row in the back.

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Twelve front-row seats beneath a brushed gold sign that said Reserved for family, because some foolish part of me still believed love became more real when you made space for it.

The showroom smelled like fresh paint, lemon cleaner, and the bitter paper coffee I had been sipping since dawn.

The overhead lights hummed softly over the demonstration kitchen, and the glass door reflected my navy blazer back at me every time I turned to see who had come in.

At 6:00 p.m., the first guests arrived.

Two rehab therapists came in together and immediately bent over the fall-detection flooring sample.

A home-care agency manager shook my hand and said she had heard good things about my pilot program.

A retired couple moved slowly through the bathroom model, touching the support rail like they expected it to feel clinical and then looking surprised when it did not.

I smiled at every person.

I watched the door behind every person.

My mother was supposed to come.

My brother Brian was supposed to come.

Aunt Carol and my cousins had promised they would be there, using the kind of excited voices people use when they know the promise costs them nothing yet.

At 6:17, I checked my phone in the back room.

Nothing.

At 6:28, I checked again.

Nothing.

At 6:45, the twelve chairs were still empty, and that small gold sign had started to feel less like decoration and more like evidence.

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