I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I didn’t start a scene. I just spoke a single sentence at the Christmas dinner table, and my entire family froze. My mother, who had looked right through me for years, finally stared at me like I was a dangerous stranger. She didn’t know that $150 million was just the beginning. By the time I was done, I hadn’t saved them; I had ensured we could never go back.
My name is Faith Stewart. For the first time in ten years, I did not sleep in the twin bed with the lumpy mattress in the back room of my mother’s house. I booked a suite at the Intercontinental on the Plaza. It was a twenty-minute drive from the suburbs where I grew up, a distance that felt like a necessary emotional airlock. I did not tell them I was in town the night before. I did not tell them I was staying in a room that cost more per night than my mother used to spend on groceries for a month. I simply arrived on Christmas Day, precisely at eleven in the morning, like a guest—or perhaps like a ghost.
Kansas City was buried under a fresh sheet of ice. The trees along the driveway were encased in crystal, beautiful and brittle, threatening to snap under the weight of their own decoration. It was the perfect metaphor for the house at the end of the cul-de-sac. From the outside, my mother’s home was a masterpiece of suburban performance art. The wreath on the door was enormous, dusted with artificial snow. The lights lining the gutters were perfectly straight, likely installed by a handyman because my father had long since checked out of such duties, and my brother, Logan, would never dirty his hands with manual labor.
I sat in my rental car for a full five minutes before getting out. I checked my reflection in the rearview mirror. I looked tired, but expensive. My coat was cashmere, structured and severe. My boots were Italian leather. I wore no jewelry except for a small platinum watch that was worth more than the car Logan drove. I was not showing off; I was armoring up. I took a deep breath, inhaling the scent of the heated leather seats one last time, and stepped out into the biting Midwestern cold.
When I opened the front door, the heat hit me first. It was suffocatingly warm, smelling of sage, roasted turkey, and cinnamon candles. It was the smell of a Hallmark movie engineered to trigger nostalgia.
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