My brother’s voice cut through the ballroom like a knife through cheap butter. “This is my stinky sister. No real job, no future—just a manual laborer.” Two hundred people in designer suits turned to look at me. Champagne flutes paused midair. Someone actually gasped. And there I stood in my nicest jeans and the silk blouse I’d bought specifically for this occasion, feeling the heat rise to my cheeks as scattered laughter rippled through the crowd. Gregory raised his glass with a smirk—my own brother, at his merger celebration, in front of everyone who mattered to him. And the worst part? My mother smiled. Not a big smile, just that tight little expression she always wore when Gregory put me in my place, like she agreed but was too polite to say it herself.
Let me back up. My name is Susie Fowl. I’m 34 years old, and according to my family, I’m the failure who digs ditches for a living. Here’s the thing they don’t know: I own Fowl & Company Landscape Architecture—47 employees across three states. Last year, we cleared 11 million in revenue. This year, we just landed a $4.2 million contract with the city for the downtown riverfront restoration project. My company has been featured in Architectural Digest twice. We won a national design award for the Morrison Park restoration. But sure, I’m just the stinky sister who plays in dirt.
I never told my family about any of this. Not the money, not the awards, not the fact that my weekly payroll is $47,000. I guess I had this naïve idea that they would eventually see me for who I am without a price tag attached, that maybe—just maybe—they would love their daughter and sister without needing to know my net worth first. Spoiler alert: they didn’t.
Gregory is 38, four years older than me and 400 years more arrogant. He works in finance, which in our family basically means he walks on water. Mom has been calling him her little success story since he got his first internship at 22. Every Thanksgiving, every Christmas, every random Tuesday phone call somehow circles back to Gregory’s latest promotion, Gregory’s new car, Gregory’s important clients. And me? Oh, Susie’s still doing her little gardening thing.
It’s not gardening, Mom. I’ve told her that approximately 7,000 times. I’m a licensed landscape architect. I design outdoor spaces, manage construction projects, and run a company with a fleet of equipment worth more than Gregory’s house. “That’s nice, honey,” she’d say, “but when are you going to get a real job? You know, something inside where you don’t get all dirty.” I stopped trying to explain years ago. Some battles aren’t worth fighting—or so I thought.
The story doesn’t end here –
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