“But God is good,” Otis continued, voice rising. “He gave us you, Jasmine. You’re the answer to our prayers. You’re the proof we did something right as parents. Finally, this family has a child who brings honor to the name Washington—someone who commands respect, someone who makes real money.”
He drove the knife deeper without even looking for blood.
“You’ve wiped away the shame of having a failure for a firstborn. To Jasmine—the true heir to this family.”
“Here, here!” Chad shouted.
Glasses clinked—an orchestra of validation for them and a death knell for me.
I stared at the closed kitchen door.
A single tear slid down my cheek. I wiped it away, angry at my own softness.
They called me a disappointment. They called me shame.
My father had just disowned me in everything but legal paperwork, and he thought Jasmine’s hundred grand was a fortune.
He had no idea the “failure” in the kitchen could buy his entire neighborhood and pave it into a parking lot without checking her balance.
I took a sip of water from my paper cup.
“Enjoy the toast, Dad,” I whispered to the empty room. “Because that champagne is going to taste like vinegar when you find out who really pays the bills in this town.”
The kitchen door swung open.
Chad sauntered in carrying an empty silver ice bucket. Tie loosened, collar unbuttoned—the picture of a man relaxing in his kingdom.
He stopped when he saw me at the card table with my paper cup of water. His eyes dragged over me with amusement and pity.
“Well, look at this,” he chuckled, heading for the freezer. “Our little Cinderella, dining in style. Hope the plastic fork is to your liking. Wouldn’t want you to feel out of place.”
I ignored him, staring straight at the wall. I didn’t have the energy to spar with a man whose greatest achievement was marrying into a family that mistook mediocrity for excellence.
Chad filled the bucket with ice, cubes clattering loudly in the quiet.
He didn’t leave.
He leaned back against the counter, swirling the ice, watching me like an exhibit.
“You know, Tiana,” he said, voice shifting into that condescending tone he used whenever he talked about money, “I actually feel bad for you. It must be hard, watching Jasmine shine like this—seeing her achieve everything you failed at. Career, marriage, respect. It has to sting.”
I finally looked at him.
“I’m happy for my sister, Chad,” I said evenly. “Her success has nothing to do with me.”
Chad laughed, short and barking.
“Keep telling yourself that, sweetheart. But we both know the truth. You’re jealous. You’re bitter. And frankly, it’s pathetic.”
He reached into his pocket, pulled out a crisp twenty, and flicked it onto the wobbly table. It landed beside my paper plate.
“Here,” he said. “Take this. Buy yourself a lottery ticket. Who knows? Maybe you’ll get lucky and finally be able to afford a personality—or at least a decent haircut.”
I stared at the bill.
An insult in green paper. A token of arrogance. Proof of how small he believed I was.
I picked it up and turned it between my fingers.
Chad watched, waiting for me to throw it back or cry. He wanted a reaction. He wanted the broken, envious sister-in-law he’d cast me as.
Instead, I smiled—slow, cold, and empty of warmth.
I set the twenty back down and smoothed it flat with deliberate care.
“You should keep that, Chad,” I said softly.
He scoffed. “Why would I need twenty bucks from a broke freelancer?”
“Because based on the audit reports I’ve seen for your consulting firm,” I said, “you’re going to need every penny you can get very soon.”
I rose and leaned in, dropping my voice.
“You might want to start saving for a good lawyer instead of buying fake purses. You’ll need this twenty more than I ever will.”
Chad’s smirk flickered—confusion flashing through for half a second—then he dismissed it with a shake of his head.
“Whatever, Tiana. Enjoy your scraps.”
He grabbed the ice bucket and pushed back through the door, leaving the bill where it was.
I left it there too.
A down payment on his destruction.
When it was time for gifts, the living room turned into a stage built for worshiping Jasmine.
She presented my parents with a brochure for a Caribbean cruise—the cheapest package available. I could practically see the 20% interest rate printed in invisible ink.
But listening to my mother, you’d think Jasmine had purchased a private island.
“Oh, Jasmine, you’re an angel,” Vera sobbed, clutching the glossy paper to her chest. “This is what success looks like.”
Otis puffed up.
“Our daughter is taking us to paradise.”
I stayed in the shadows holding a small, heavy cream envelope.
Inside was a single silver iron key.
It belonged to a five-bedroom villa on Martha’s Vineyard I’d purchased through a shell company two months ago. Fully paid. Fully furnished. Fully staffed.
I’d bought it because my father always talked about retiring near the ocean, watching the waves.
When the applause finally thinned out, I stepped forward.
“I have something for you too, Mom. Dad,” I said quietly, extending the envelope across the coffee table.
The room went silent.
The warmth they’d poured onto Jasmine vanished like a candle blown out.
Vera looked at the envelope like it was a dead insect on a dinner plate.
“Oh, Tiana,” she sighed, wiping happy tears and replacing them with exhaustion. “We really don’t need anything from you. Save your little money for rent. We don’t want you starving just to buy us a card.”
“Just take it,” I said, hand steady. “It’s something I thought you’d appreciate.”
Jasmine snickered from the sofa, champagne in hand.
“It’s probably a coupon book,” she said. “Or a drawing she made. She still thinks she’s in kindergarten.”
Vera yanked the envelope from my hand.
She didn’t open it gently. She tore it with a violent rip and flipped it upside down.
The silver key slid out, clattered onto the glass coffee table, spun, and settled.
Just metal.
No tag. No logo. Raw, heavy, real.
Vera stared.
Then her gaze snapped to me, lip curling.
“What is this?” she asked flatly.
“It’s a key,” I started, throat tightening. “It opens a—”
Vera cut me off with a harsh laugh that echoed off the high ceilings.
“A door to what, Tiana? Your apartment? Did you get evicted again? Are you trying to give us a spare key so you can sneak back into this house when you inevitably fail?”
I tried to speak, but she stood and pinched the key between two fingers like it was contaminated.
“I don’t want this,” she spat. “I don’t want a key to whatever run-down shack you’re living in. I don’t want access to your struggle, Tiana. We just received a luxury cruise from a CEO. Do you really think we want a key to your rental room?”
Before I could get the words out—Martha’s Vineyard—Vera walked to the gold trash can in the corner.
She held the key over it.
“Mom, wait,” I said, stepping forward. “That’s not what you think. That key represents more than you know.”
Clink.
She dropped it.
My gift. My multi-million-dollar gesture.
Now sitting on top of used wrapping paper and discarded ribbons.
“That is where your contribution belongs,” Vera said, dusting her hands like she’d touched something filthy. “Now sit down and stop ruining your sister’s moment with your cheap sentimental trash.”
After that, the atmosphere thickened—triumph for Jasmine, humiliation for me.
Guests mingled, sipped their drinks, and glanced at me with barely concealed pity.
I began gathering my things, ready to escape.
But Jasmine wasn’t finished.
“Oh, wait,” she called, clapping her hands. “We need a family photo. Everyone gather around the tree. This is going to be perfect for my Instagram. #CEOlife #blessed”
My parents immediately flanked her, beaming like lottery winners. Chad slid in beside Jasmine and put a possessive hand on her waist. The pastor and his wife were ushered into position.
I hovered near the door, hoping to slip out.
Jasmine spotted me.
See more on the next page
Advertisement