“Tiana, get over here,” she ordered, waving me like a misbehaving dog. “You’re technically family, so you should be in the picture.”
Reluctantly, I walked over and stood near my mother.
Jasmine frowned.
“No, not there,” she said, shaking her head. “You’re ruining the aesthetic. Your sweater clashes with the gold theme. Move to the end. Way over to the end.”
I moved to the far left of the group, beside Chad’s assistant, who looked uncomfortable.
Jasmine studied the arrangement through her phone.
“Still not right,” she muttered. “Okay, Tiana—two steps left. No more. More.”
I edged farther away until there was a clear gap between me and the rest of them.
“Perfect,” Jasmine declared, a cruel smile pulling at her mouth. “That way I can just crop you out later. I don’t want your sad energy bringing down my engagement metrics. My followers want to see success, Tiana—not whatever it is you have going on.”
Laughter burst through the room again.
My father slapped his knee.
“That’s a good one, Jasmine!” he roared. “Crop her out! That’s exactly what we’ve been trying to do for years!”
Even the pastor chuckled, trying to hide it behind a cough.
I stood isolated at the edge of my own family, their mockery burning my skin.
They weren’t just taking a photo.
They were erasing me.
They were telling me—clearly, finally—that I didn’t belong. That I was an eyesore, a blemish on their perfect life.
I looked at my mother, waiting for a flicker of defense, a spark of maternal instinct.
Vera only adjusted her pearls, angling her face toward the camera, completely indifferent to her oldest daughter’s public shaming.
That was the moment the last thread of hope snapped.
I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I didn’t beg.
I turned around and walked away.
As I reached the front door, I heard the camera shutter click, then cheers.
They celebrated their perfect picture—a picture that felt complete because I wasn’t in it.
I opened the heavy oak door and stepped into the cold night air.
Behind me, Chad called out, “Don’t forget your trash, Tiana.”
He meant the key.
I kept walking.
Gravel crunched under my boots—lonely sound, wide silence.
I climbed into my ten-year-old sedan and started the engine.
As I drove away from the mansion that had never truly been home, I made myself a promise:
The next time they saw me, they wouldn’t be able to crop me out—because I would own the frame.
Three days passed after I walked out of that Christmas nightmare.
I was in my home office reviewing acquisition reports for a competitor when my burner phone buzzed.
Vera.
Her voice was tight, clipped, like a wire about to snap.
“Get to the house immediately, Tiana. It’s an emergency.”
She hung up before I could ask if someone was dead or if the house was on fire. I assumed fire would be an improvement.
I pulled on my disguise—worn jeans, a faded hoodie—and drove my dented Honda back to the scene of the crime.
When I entered the living room, the air was heavy enough to crush a lung. It didn’t feel like family.
It felt like a criminal trial where the verdict had already been decided.
Otis sat in his armchair, staring at the floor, refusing to meet my eyes. Chad stood behind the white sofa, hands kneading Jasmine’s shoulders.
And Jasmine—my high-flying CEO sister—sobbed theatrically into a lace handkerchief.
Vera paced in front of the fireplace like a prosecutor.
“Sit down,” Vera commanded, pointing to a hard wooden stool dragged in from the kitchen. “We have a crisis. Your sister is under immense pressure. She carries the weight of this family’s reputation on her back, and it’s taking a toll.”
I sat on the stool, the wood unforgiving beneath me.
“What’s wrong, Jasmine?” I asked flatly. “Did you break a nail signing autographs?”
Jasmine let out another wail.
“You wouldn’t understand, Tiana,” she choked out. “You don’t know what it’s like to manage an empire. The stress is eating me alive. I have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to expand Logistics Solutions. We’re talking global reach, Tiana—global. But the banks are being so shortsighted. They want collateral. They want liquidity. They don’t see the vision.”
Chad chimed in, grave and self-important.
“We need capital to secure the new warehouse deal. If we miss this window, the competition wins. Jasmine has worked too hard to let this slip away. She deserves this expansion. She’s earned it.”
I stared at them.
They’d dragged me here so I could watch Jasmine cry about money.
Absurd.
“Why are you telling me this?” I asked. “You know I’m just a broke freelancer. I can barely afford gas. Why not ask the Bank of Mom and Dad?”
Vera stopped pacing. She turned to me, eyes cold, calculating.
“We’ve already liquidated what we can to support her startup costs,” she said. “Being a CEO requires appearances. The cars, the clothes, the parties—it all costs money. We’re tapped out for cash right now.”
A pause.
“But we have assets,” she continued. “Or rather… this family has assets. And that is why you’re here. We need to discuss sacrifices. Real sacrifices, not the crumbs you offer.”
Jasmine lifted her face from the handkerchief.
Her eyes were suddenly dry.
Predatory.
“We need to talk about Grandpa’s land,” she whispered.
Otis reached behind his cushion and pulled out a thick manila envelope. He tossed it onto the glass coffee table.
It landed with a heavy thud and slid until it tapped my knee.
I knew the handwriting instantly.
My grandfather Samuel’s.
He’d died two years ago, leaving a hole in my chest this family could never fill.
“Open it,” Otis ordered.
I reached for the envelope, fingertips brushing the familiar script. Inside was a deed—fifty acres in North Carolina.
My eyes skimmed the legal language until they hit the beneficiary line.
Not Otis Washington.
Not Jasmine Washington.
Tiana Washington.
“Grandpa left this to me,” I whispered. The paper trembled slightly in my hands.
I remembered that land. Summers with him, away from the pressure and pretense of Atlanta. Walking through tall pines while he told me dirt was the one thing they weren’t making any more of.
He told me it was freedom.
He told me never to let it go.
“Your grandfather wasn’t in his right mind at the end,” Otis snapped, slicing through my memory. “He was confused, Tiana. He forgot who the leaders of this family are. He left that prime real estate to you probably thinking you needed a place to pitch a tent since you can barely afford rent.”
His finger jabbed at the paper.
“But we’re going to fix his mistake today.”
“Fix it how?” I asked, though my stomach already knew the answer.
The air in the room tightened, suffocating.
Jasmine had stopped pretending to cry. She watched me like a hawk watching a field mouse.
“You’re going to sign a quitclaim deed,” Otis said like he was ordering coffee. “You’re going to transfer the title to your sister immediately. Jasmine needs collateral to secure a massive business loan for her expansion. The banks want tangible assets, and that land is the only thing we have left that isn’t leveraged to the hilt.”
He leaned forward.
“It’s sitting there doing nothing, just growing weeds. In Jasmine’s hands, it becomes capital. It becomes a legacy. In your hands, it’s just dirt you can’t afford to maintain.”
I looked down at the deed.
To them, it was a chip to trade for more fake status.
To me, it was the last gift from the only man who had ever loved me without conditions.
“You want me to just give it to her?” I asked, voice steady. “Hand over my inheritance so she can gamble it on a logistics deal?”
“It’s not giving it away,” Otis barked. “It’s correcting an oversight. You have no money, Tiana. How are you going to pay property taxes? Maintain boundaries? The state will seize it from you in two years anyway because you’re destitute.”
His voice turned contemptuous.
“Do the right thing for the family. Sign the land over to the CEO who knows what to do with it. Be useful for once in your life.”
Vera sat on the ottoman directly in front of me, close enough to invade my air. She put her hand over mine.
Her touch was cold.
Her voice dropped into something meant to sound maternal, but it only sounded condescending.
“Tiana, baby, listen to your father. We’re not trying to hurt you. We’re trying to save you from yourself. Look at your life. You’re thirty-two and what do you really have to show for it?”
She ticked it off like a list.
“No husband. No real career. No assets to speak of. You’re living paycheck to paycheck in some rental apartment that probably has drafty windows and loud neighbors.”
She sighed like my existence tired her.
“Do you honestly think you’re equipped to manage fifty acres of undeveloped land? You don’t have a business mind, Tiana. You never did. You’re a dreamer.”
Her eyes widened, pleading—yet behind them I could see gears turning.
“That land requires management. Taxes that rise every year. Liability insurance. Maintenance fees. Do you even have the credit score to open a utility account for a property that size? If you keep it, you’re going to lose it. The government will seize it for back taxes within eighteen months and then nobody wins. Grandpa’s legacy will be auctioned to strangers because of your stubborn pride. Is that what you want?”
She leaned closer.
“Think about the future. Jasmine is going places. She’s building generational wealth for all of us. She has vision and drive that you simply lack. If you sign this land over now, she can leverage it, secure the capital she needs, turn that dirt into gold.”
Vera’s tone softened into a promise.
“And you know what that means for you? Security. When Jasmine makes it big, she’ll take care of you. You’ll never worry about rent again. She might even buy you a nice little condo—or let you live in the guest house of her new estate.”
A chill slid down my spine.
She was painting my future as a permanent dependent. A charity case living off crumbs from my sister’s table.
She wanted me to trade independence for a promise she didn’t intend to keep.
She wanted me to believe I was too incompetent to own anything valuable.
“Don’t be selfish, Tiana,” Vera said, squeezing my hand hard enough to hurt. “This is your chance to finally contribute to this family instead of draining our emotional resources. You’ve been a taker for years. Now you can finally give something back.”
Her voice sharpened.
“Be a good sister. Be a good daughter. Sign the paper and let the adults handle business. You’re just going to mess it up like you mess up everything else. Let Jasmine carry the burden of wealth—that’s what leaders do.”
And then the final blow, delivered with certainty:
“And let’s be honest, Tiana. You’re not a leader. You’re a follower. So follow our lead and sign the deed before you ruin everything.”
Chad stood up abruptly. Ice clinked in his glass as he slammed it down on a coaster.
He loomed over me, face flushed with expensive scotch and cheap entitlement.
“You’re not listening, Tiana,” he spat. “We’re done asking nicely. You think you can sit there and hold this family hostage with your stubbornness? You think because you manipulated a senile old man into scribbling your name on paper you actually own that land?”
He circled the coffee table until he was right beside my chair. He leaned down, his cologne overpowering the room.
“Let me explain how the real world works, since you clearly have no experience in it. If you don’t sign that quitclaim deed right now, we’re going to sue you.”
His voice sharpened with relish.
“And we’re not just suing you for the land. We’re going to sue you for elder abuse. We’re going to sue you for undue influence. We’re going to drag your name through the mud until no one in this state will hire you to sweep floors.”
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