The Poor Sister They Banned From The Wedding Owned The Groom’s Future-Tep

The rain had been coming down since late afternoon, tapping the window of my apartment like impatient fingers.

By six-thirty, the street below was shining with headlights and puddles, and the whole room smelled faintly of coffee, dust, and wet pavement drifting in through the old window frame.

I was sitting at my desk in the sweater my mother hated.

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Gray, frayed at one cuff, comfortable in the way clothes become when they have stayed with you through harder things than embarrassment.

Three computer monitors glowed in front of me.

The middle one held the final acquisition agreement.

The left one held the board consent packet.

The right one held the escrow confirmation, the attorney thread, and the press release scheduled to publish at 7:00 p.m.

The number was still there.

$91,000,000.

Cash.

My company.

My signature.

And ten minutes before I was supposed to close the largest deal of my life, my mother called to tell me I was too embarrassing for my sister’s wedding.

“Cancel your room,” she said before I could even say hello. “Genevieve and I discussed it. It would be better if you didn’t come.”

I looked down at the caller ID, though I already knew it was her.

Mom.

On speaker.

She always put me on speaker when she wanted an audience.

I heard glass clicking in the background, maybe champagne flutes, maybe the good wineglasses she only brought out when someone with money was in the house.

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