My family feasted on steak under crystal chandeliers, while the only thing served to me was a check they called “scrap money.” They told me to be grateful for crumbs from the empire, unaware that the amount on that paper was merely a fraction of the interest they paid me every single month. Tonight, amidst their sneers about success, I would turn my laptop around and force them to look at their own debt statement for the very first time.
My name is Aubrey Hughes, and for as long as I could remember, my presence at the Harrington family table had been tolerated rather than desired. I was the glitch in their genetic code, the anomaly that refused to conform to the ruthless pursuit of capital that defined our bloodline.
Tonight was no different. We were seated in the private dining room of a restaurant so exclusive, it did not bother putting a sign on the door. Located in the heart of the city where the skyline pierced the clouds like a bar graph of rising profits, the walls were lined with velvet. The air smelled of aged mahogany and truffle oil, and the silence was only broken by the polite clinking of silver against bone china.
I sat at the far end of the long mahogany table, a position that felt less like a seat of honor and more like an exile. Around me, the air shimmered with the invisible static of immense wealth. My brother Logan was wearing a timepiece that cost more than the annual budget of the nonprofit organization I worked for. My sister Sienna was draped in a dress that looked like it had been spun from liquid diamonds, her laughter sharp and brittle as she recounted a recent vacation to the Amalfi Coast.
And then there was me. I was wearing a simple black dress I had bought off the rack three years ago, my hair pulled back in a functional bun, my hands folded quietly in my lap. I did not have a diamond bracelet to catch the light. I did not have a story about a yacht. I had silence, and I had patience.
My father, Charles Harrington, the architect of this empire and the man who currently held the lease on my self-esteem, tapped his crystal flute with a dessert spoon. The sound was delicate, but it commanded immediate obedience. Conversation died instantly. Waiters, who had been hovering like ghosts in the periphery, froze in place.
Charles stood up. He was a man who took up space even when he was sitting down. His presence expanded by the sheer force of his ego. He smoothed the lapels of his suit, looking down the length of the table at his creation—his children, his nieces, his nephews—smiling with the benevolence of a king surveying his subjects.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
