“You’re right, Chad,” I said, voice calm, steady. “I wouldn’t want to bring down the property value of the furniture. I’ll stand.”
I walked to the wall he’d indicated and leaned against it, folding my arms.
From this angle, I could see everything: the fake bag, the fake smiles, and the very real rot at the heart of my family.
Let them keep their chairs.
I owned the ground their house of cards was built on.
“Dinner is served,” my mother announced, her voice ringing out like a church bell summoning the faithful.
We filed into the dining room—newly renovated to resemble a French château. A long mahogany table sat under a crystal chandelier, set for twelve.
It was a masterpiece of exclusion.
A silk damask tablecloth draped to the floor. Gold chargers gleamed. Each place setting had a hand-calligraphed name card.
I scanned the table for mine.
Cards for my parents.
Cards for Jasmine and Chad.
Cards for the pastor and his wife.
There was even a card for Chad’s assistant who’d tagged along.
No card for Tiana.
I paused behind an empty chair near the end, assuming it was an oversight. I reached for the back of it—
—and Jasmine cleared her throat, sharp and aggressive.
“Oh, Tiana,” she said, voice dripping with fake sweetness, “that seat isn’t for you. That’s for Deacon Miller. He’s running late, but he’s on his way.”
I stared at her.
“Then where am I sitting?” I asked.
Jasmine giggled and exchanged a look with Chad.
“Well, we had to make some adjustments,” she said, waving a manicured hand vaguely. “Since tonight is really a business dinner to celebrate my promotion, we need to keep the conversation focused on success and strategy. We figured you’d be bored with all the high-level talk about stocks and acquisitions.”
She pointed her long acrylic nail toward the swinging door into the kitchen.
“We set up a special spot for you in there,” she continued. “The kitty table. You know—like when we were little. It’s cozy, and you’ll be closer to the food if we need refills on the wine.”
Chad snorted into his napkin.
“Yeah, Tiana,” he added. “Plus, you wouldn’t want to spill anything on this tablecloth. It’s imported silk. Costs more than your car.”
My mother adjusted the floral centerpiece, pretending she couldn’t hear her oldest daughter being exiled to the servants’ quarters.
“Mom,” I said quietly, “are you serious? I’m thirty-two years old.”
Vera finally looked up, irritated as if I’d interrupted something important.
“Oh, stop making a scene, Tiana. Jasmine is the guest of honor. It’s her night. If she wants the main table for business associates, then that’s how it’s going to be. Just go sit in the kitchen and be grateful you’re getting a free meal.”
Heat crawled up my neck, but I forced it down.
I looked at Jasmine. She was glowing with triumph in her petty cruelty.
She thought she was putting me in my place. She thought she was banishing the failure to the back room so I wouldn’t taint their image of perfection.
She had no idea she was sending the owner of a billion-dollar company to a plastic chair.
I smoothed my sweater.
“Very well,” I said evenly. “I wouldn’t want to interrupt the important business talk.”
I walked past the table with my head held high. As I pushed open the kitchen door, laughter followed me, light and cruel.
The kitchen was hot, smelling of dish soap and grease.
In the corner sat a wobbly card table with a single plastic folding chair. No tablecloth, no crystal—just a paper plate and a plastic fork.
I sat down and stared at the swinging door.
Through the small window, I could see them raising glasses and toasting with my expensive wine.
They thought they’d won.
From where I sat, I had the perfect view of their downfall.
From my exile in the kitchen, I heard everything. The door was thin, and Jasmine had never mastered an inside voice—especially when she was bragging.
Silverware clinked against fine china, then stopped.
I pictured Jasmine standing, smoothing her red dress, soaking in attention like a lizard in sun.
“I have some news,” she announced, her voice carrying into the kitchen. “The board officially approved my compensation package today. Starting January 1st, my base salary will be one hundred thousand a year, plus stock options.”
The dining room exploded like a revival meeting.
My mother shrieked.
“$100,000!” Vera gasped. “Oh, Jasmine, that’s incredible. You’re going to be the richest woman in our church circle. Sister Patterson is going to die of jealousy when I tell her!”
I poked at a dry piece of cornbread with my plastic fork.
One hundred thousand.
Respectable for a twenty-nine-year-old. In some abstract, distant way, I was happy for her.
But the irony made my mouth twitch.
My personal assistant made $120,000 a year. My quarterly tax bill was more than Jasmine would earn in a decade.
And to them, this was the pinnacle of human achievement.
A chair scraped—heavy, deliberate. My father, Otis, standing.
I could hear him lifting a crystal goblet filled with the wine they’d taken from me.
“Quiet, everyone, quiet, please,” he boomed, voice thick with pride and expensive alcohol. “I want to propose a toast to my daughter Jasmine.”
He paused for effect.
“For years, your mother and I prayed for a sign. We prayed that our legacy wouldn’t end in embarrassment.”
A beat.
“We looked at your sister and we despaired. We saw wasted potential. We saw mediocrity. We saw a dead end.”
I stopped chewing.
The cornbread turned to dust in my mouth.
He wasn’t just praising her.
He was burying me.
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