Dad Gave Sarah The Beach House, Then The Trust Locked Her Out-Teptep

The smell that morning was orange peel.

Not the friendly sort left on a kitchen counter after breakfast, but the sharp little spray of citrus oil twisted over champagne glasses by a waiter who moved as if nobody in the room had ever dropped anything in their life.

It floated above our long table at the club, mixing with warm croissants, polished wood, clean linen, and the faint swimming-pool smell coming through the glass from outside.

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Sarah sat in the centre of it as if the whole room had been arranged around her chair.

She wore a cream blazer that looked expensive without trying to look expensive, pearl earrings, and the bright public smile she saved for occasions when witnesses mattered.

Beside her plate sat a neat stack of graduation cards.

Her MBA diploma was probably still in its folder in Mum’s car, but Sarah had already turned the day into something more than a family brunch.

It felt like a coronation with pastries.

Dad lifted his glass first.

He always did that when he wanted the room to understand he was in charge of the feeling.

“To Sarah,” he said, his voice carrying just far enough for the next table to glance over. “The future of the family business.”

People smiled.

Glasses rose.

Mum looked at Sarah as if she had personally invented ambition.

Chris leaned back in his chair, grinning, already enjoying the show.

I lifted my water glass.

Sarah’s eyes flicked towards me.

It was quick, but I knew the look.

She wanted to see whether it hurt.

She wanted the tiny satisfaction of knowing I understood my place at that table.

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