The number seemed to physically shove her backward. She grabbed the table edge to steady herself. Her knees buckled and she sank slowly back into her chair, eyes locked on the screen.
Her mouth hung open, but no sound came.
The image of me loomed over her like a giant over an ant.
“That’s not possible,” she whispered, the fight draining out of her. “You deliver groceries. Deliver… you live in a rent-controlled apartment. I saw your shoes. I saw your car. It’s fake. It has to be fake. A Photoshop.”
I leaned forward, resting my chin on my hand.
“It’s called stealth wealth, Jasmine,” I said, my voice echoing in the silence. “And while you were busy playing rich, I was busy getting rich.”
I let the words land.
“While you were buying logos, I was buying companies. That profile went live this morning. You’re the first to see it.”
A pause.
“Consider it my gift to you. The realization that you’re not just broke—you’re insignificant.”
I reached beneath the table and pulled out the thick black folder Harrison had prepared that morning. It was heavy—dense with paper and damnation.
I didn’t slide it across gently.
I lifted it and dropped it.
The thud cracked through the quiet like a gunshot. Water in the glasses trembled.
Jasmine jumped so hard her knee smacked the underside of the table with a sickening crack, but fear kept her silent.
Chad stared at the folder like it was an unexploded bomb.
“Open it,” I said, my voice stripped of warmth.
It was the voice of a judge delivering a verdict.
“Go ahead, Jasmine. Take a look at your real legacy. It’s not the empire you talked about. It’s the crime scene you created.”
Her hand trembled as she reached out. Her manicured nails clicked against the hard cover.
She flipped it open.
The first page was a summary, highlighted in yellow and red. Her eyes widened as she scanned.
“It’s all there, Jasmine,” I said, circling the table slowly, like a shark in deep water. “Every single lie. Every doctored invoice. Every fake expense report.”
I pointed with my voice, each sentence another shove.
“See that line item on page three—the one you labeled as research and development? My forensic accountants traced it. It didn’t go to a lab. It went to a luxury car dealership in Miami. You leased a convertible with company funds and wrote it off as a business trip.”
I stopped, letting the truth sharpen.
“That isn’t creative accounting, Jasmine. That’s embezzlement.”
I paused behind Chad’s chair. He sat rigid, barely breathing.
“And page ten is my personal favorite,” I said, leaning close enough that my voice slipped right into his ear. “You claimed a tax deduction for a dedicated home office, but the address listed is a vacation rental in the Hamptons—where you stayed for a week with friends.”
I straightened.
“You haven’t paid federal income tax in three years. You’ve been filing returns with zeros while posting pictures of champagne towers on Instagram.”
I let the question cut.
“Do you think the IRS doesn’t have the internet? Do you think they missed your #blessed posts while you were robbing the government?”
Jasmine flipped pages faster, breathing in short, sharp gasps.
There were emails—her telling Chad to hide losses. There were bank statements—transfers to offshore entities that didn’t exist, shell companies built to hide debt.
“I have enough in that folder to put you away for fifteen years,” I said, voice dropping into a dangerous whisper. “This is federal fraud. Banking fraud. Wire fraud.”
I watched her shake.
“And because you tried to defraud a federally insured institution, the penalties are double.”
I could have been describing the weather.
“I could pick up that phone right now and call the FBI. They’d be here in ten minutes. They’d cuff you in front of the lobby staff. They’d walk you out past the waterfall—past Marcus—and shove you into the back of a squad car.”
I leaned in just a fraction.
“And the best part? I wouldn’t even need to testify. The paper trail you left is so wide a blind man could follow it.”
Jasmine looked up, tears streaming, ruining the blouse she’d bought to impress.
“Please, Tiana,” she choked. “You can’t do that. We’re family. You can’t send your own sister to prison.”
I looked at her—cold, hard.
“You were ready to send your own sister to the poorhouse, Jasmine. You were ready to forge my signature and steal my land to cover up these crimes. You wanted to make me homeless so you could stay out of jail.”
I didn’t raise my voice.
“So don’t talk to me about family. You forfeited that right when you picked up that pen to practice my signature.”
I turned away from her sobbing.
“You’re not my sister right now. You’re a liability.”
My gaze sharpened.
“And at Nexus Health, we liquidate liabilities.”
Then I locked eyes with Chad—the man sweating through his cheap rental suit.
He tried to shrink into the massive chair, hoping I’d forget him. Hoping that because he was just an accessory, he might slide.
But I didn’t forget.
“I didn’t forget you, Chad,” I said, walking toward him. “In fact, I saved the best for last.”
I let him feel every step.
“Jasmine was stealing to save her ego. She was cooking the books to keep the lights on and pretend she was a success.”
I stopped.
“But you, Chad—you were stealing for a much more traditional reason.”
My voice went flat.
“Greed and lust.”
I nodded once to Sterling.
“Next slide. Arthur, let’s show the happy couple what real spending looks like.”
The screen flickered.
Gone were tax returns and boring statements.
Now—photos.
High-definition, crisp, undeniable surveillance shots.
Jasmine looked up through tears and froze.
The first photo showed Chad at an outdoor café in Buckhead, laughing, head thrown back, holding a glass of white wine.
He wasn’t alone.
Across from him sat a woman—young, blonde, fit—holding his hand across the table. A diamond bracelet caught the sunlight.
“Who is that?” Jasmine whispered, voice trembling with a new horror. “Who is that woman with my husband?”
I walked to the screen and pointed.
“Meet Lexi,” I said casually. “She’s twenty-two. She works bottle service at that club you like to pretend you’re too classy for.”
I looked back at Chad.
“And she’s expensive.”
I returned my attention to Jasmine.
“Those withdrawals you thought were rush shipping fees—the ones labeled expedited logistics in the ledger—they didn’t go to FedEx or UPS.”
I let the truth peel back the lie.
“They went to a luxury apartment complex. Lexi’s apartment.”
Chad shook his head violently, mouthing no over and over like a broken toy.
“Two hundred thousand dollars, Chad,” I said, letting the number hang like smoke.
“You embezzled two hundred thousand from your own wife’s failing company. While Jasmine was panicking about payroll, begging our parents for money, trying to steal my inheritance to cover debt—you were siphoning off the last drops to play sugar daddy to a girl half your age.”
I tapped the screen again.
A new image appeared: a receipt for a car. A brand-new red convertible—not a lease. A purchase under the name Lexi Miller, paid by a wire transfer from Logistics Solutions.
“You bought her a car,” Jasmine screamed.
The sound tore through the boardroom. She stood, chair skidding.
“I am driving a leased sedan that’s three months behind on payments, and you bought a waitress a convertible!”
Her voice cracked with rage.
“You told me that money was for warehouse insurance. You told me the rates went up. You swore we had to pay it or we’d lose the inventory.”
Chad held up his hands, pale and slick with sweat.
“Jasmine, baby—it’s not what it looks like,” he stammered. “Tiana is lying. She doctored the photos. It’s deepfake technology. You know how rich she is. She can afford to fake anything to break us up. She’s jealous of our love.”
I laughed.
It was cold. Dark.
“Deepfake technology,” I repeated. “Chad, really? Is that your defense?”
I tossed another document onto the table. It landed in front of Jasmine: a bank transfer record signed by Chad, listing the recipient clearly—Lexi Miller.
“Deepfakes don’t leave paper trails at the bank,” I said.
I didn’t blink.
“You stole from your wife. You cheated on her. And you helped her commit fraud to cover your own tracks.”
My voice sharpened into a verdict.
“You are not a businessman, Chad. You’re a parasite.”
I looked at Jasmine, then Chad.
“You’ve been feeding off Jasmine’s insecurity—her desperate need to be a CEO. You let her take the risk while you had the fun.”
Jasmine stared at the document, then at Chad.
The rage in her eyes was terrifying.
For the first time all day, she wasn’t looking at me with hate.
She was looking at him.
“You are dead,” she whispered. “You are absolutely dead to me.”
I sat back in my chair and watched the fireworks.
This was the true destruction of the Washington family image—not by my hand, but by their own greed and lust.
I’d only turned on the lights.
The roaches scattered on their own.
The silence shattered—not with words, but with a scream that sounded like something wounded.
Jasmine launched herself across the gap. Her manicured hands—usually careful to hold a champagne flute just so—curled into claws. She raked her nails down Chad’s face, leaving angry red marks against his pale, sweating skin.
“You thief!” she shrieked, voice shredding. “You miserable, lying parasite. I gave you everything!”
Chad yelled, stumbling backward, tripping over chair legs. They both went down in a heap of expensive fabric and cheap, desperate rage.
It was ugly. Chaotic.
Jasmine swung her purse like a weapon, the heavy gold chain whipping. The fake Hermès bag burst open, spilling lipstick and breath mints across the polished floor.
“Get off me, you crazy witch!” Chad bellowed, shoving her backward hard enough that she slid.
He scrambled up, suit torn at the shoulder, tie hanging loose like a noose. He didn’t look at her with love—or regret.
He looked at her with venom.
“You think this is my fault?” he shouted, wiping a smear of blood from his cheek. “You drove me to this, Jasmine. You and your obsession with status.”
His voice rose, raw.
“Do you know what it’s like living with you? Waking up every day and acting out a script because you’re too insecure to be yourself?”
Jasmine sat on the floor, hair a bird’s nest of tangles, chest heaving.
“I was building a future,” she sobbed. “I was building a legacy for us!”
“Legacy?” Chad spat the word like it tasted rotten. “You were building a house of cards.”
He jabbed a finger at her.
“You forced me into this. You told me to fudge the numbers on the tax returns. You said we needed to leverage warehouse inventory that didn’t exist. I told you it was dangerous. I told you we’d get caught, but you just wanted to buy more shoes. You wanted to look good for Instagram.”
His voice dropped, bitter.
“I took that money because I needed an escape. Five minutes with Lexi where I didn’t have to listen to you talking about synergy and market caps.”
I stayed perfectly still in the chairman’s seat, fingers curled around condensation on my glass.
I took another sip of sparkling water. The bubbles snapped on my tongue, a sharp contrast to the ugly unraveling on the floor.
I watched them tear each other apart with the detachment of a scientist observing rats in a maze.
This was the couple that mocked my single life.
Now they were destroying what little dignity remained, right in front of me, while I watched from the throne.
“You are a coward!” Jasmine screamed, trying to stand, slipping on spilled lip gloss. “You are weak! Spineless! I made you who you are!”
“And look where that got me,” Chad shot back, backing toward the door, eyes wild. “I am facing federal prison because of you. I should have left you years ago. I should have taken that money and run to Mexico with Lexi. At least she likes me for me—not for the title on my business card.”
Sterling stood near the wall, face impassive, though I caught a flicker of disgust. He’d seen hostile takeovers and corporate raids, but maybe he’d never watched a marriage die this violently over a balance sheet.
I set my glass down. The sound echoed with finality.
Time to end the show.
They had destroyed each other thoroughly enough. Now it was time for me to sweep up the pieces.
I reached for the sleek tablet on the marble table. It was time to bring the architects of this disaster into the room—to witness the collapse of their creation.
I tapped the video call icon for Vera.
It rang twice, then connected.
The image filled the screen: my parents’ living room—the same room where they mocked my gift and demanded my land.
Vera held a crystal flute of champagne. Otis smoked a cigar. They looked smug, like they were already celebrating the millions they believed Jasmine was about to steal.
“Did she get the check?” Vera asked, voice shrill with excitement. “Is the deal done, Tiana? Put your sister on. We want to congratulate the new tycoon.”
I didn’t answer.
I flipped the camera and panned slowly across the wreckage.
Overturned leather chairs.
Chad on the floor, wiping blood from his cheek, suit torn.
Then Jasmine—curled near the window, sobbing into her hands, her perfect white pantsuit stained with dirt and tears.
Vera dropped her champagne flute. Even through the speakers, I heard it shatter.
“Oh my God!” she screamed. “Jasmine—what happened? Tiana, what did you do to them? Did you attack them? I’m calling the police. Otis, get the gun. Tiana has gone crazy!”
I turned the camera back to my face.
Calm. Composed.
Every inch the billionaire chairwoman they’d never bothered to see.
“Put the phone down, Vera,” I said, voice steady. “Nobody was attacked. Your daughter and her husband just had a disagreement about the two hundred thousand he stole from her to buy a car for his girlfriend.”
Otis choked on cigar smoke.
“Girlfriend?” he sputtered. “What are you talking about?”
“But that’s not why I called,” I continued, ignoring his confusion. “I called to talk about real estate—specifically, your real estate.”
I watched their faces tighten.
“When I ran the background check on Jasmine’s finances, I found something interesting. I found you two co-signed a bridge loan for her six months ago. You put the family manor up as collateral.”
I let the next line land.
“And because Jasmine hasn’t made a payment in four months, that loan is in default.”
Vera leaned close to the screen, face drained pale.
“We can fix that,” she stammered. “Once Jasmine gets the Apex funding, we’ll pay it off. It’s just a temporary cash flow issue.”
“There is no Apex funding,” I said coldly. “And there is no more time.”
I didn’t blink.
“The bank was preparing to foreclose on your house next week. They were going to auction it to the highest bidder.”
I smiled without warmth.
“But I saved them the trouble. I bought the note this morning.”
Otis stared, eyes bulging.
“You… you bought the note. What does that mean?”
“It means I own the mortgage, Dad,” I said, leaning back. “It means I own the debt. And since you’re four months behind and clearly insolvent, I’m exercising my right to accelerate the loan.”
My voice stayed even.
“You owe me the full balance immediately.”
A beat.
“Or you leave.”
“You can’t do that!” Vera shrieked. “That’s our home. We’ve lived there for thirty years. You can’t kick your own parents out on the street!”
“I can and I will,” I replied. “You threw my gift in the trash, Vera. You told me you didn’t want a key to my world.”
I held her gaze.
“Well, now you don’t have a key to yours either.”
I watched her face crack.
“You have thirty days to vacate the premises. I suggest you start packing. I hear the rental market is very expensive this time of year.”
My tone sharpened into something almost gentle.
“Maybe you can find a nice swamp to live in. I hear you’re fond of them.”
The realization hit like a wave.
That house was their pride, their status symbol, and now it belonged to the daughter they called a failure.
I didn’t wait for begging. I didn’t wait for fake apologies.
I tapped the red button and ended the call, leaving them in silence to contemplate their new reality as homeless socialites.
The silence that followed broke with a sound so pathetic it was hard to believe it came from a woman who called herself a CEO.
Jasmine crawled across the cold marble floor on her hands and knees, abandoning the dignity she’d preached all afternoon. Mascara ran down her cheeks in black rivulets. She looked wrecked—unrecognizable.
She wrapped her arms around my legs, burying her face in my trousers.
“Please, Tiana,” she wailed, voice muffled and wet. “You can’t do this. You can’t take the house. You can’t put me in jail. I’m your little sister. We used to play dolls together. You used to protect me. Please don’t ruin me.”
On the table, the tablet buzzed violently.
I glanced down.
Vera was calling back.
I accepted and propped the device against a crystal water pitcher so they could witness the scene.
Vera’s face was swollen, red.
“Tiana, baby—listen to me,” she sobbed, voice cracking. “We made mistakes. We were hard on you. But it was only because we wanted you to be tough. It was tough love, Tiana. I carried you in my womb for nine months. I gave you life. You can’t destroy your own flesh and blood over money.”
Her voice rose, pleading.
“We’re a family. Families forgive. Families support each other. Think about your father. His heart is weak. This could kill him.”
I looked down at Jasmine clinging to my leg like a drowning sailor. I looked at my mother on the screen, pouring out crocodile tears.
A symphony of manipulation.
They weren’t sorry for what they did.
They were sorry they lost.
They were sorry the bank account closed.
I reached down and gripped Jasmine’s shoulder—not gently. I pried her fingers off one by one. She tried to hold on, nails digging in, but I was stronger.
I shoved her backward with one sharp, decisive motion.
She toppled onto her side, gasping, staring up at me with betrayal in her eyes.
“Do not touch me,” I said, voice low and dangerous, vibrating through the quiet. “Do not dare speak to me about sisterhood. Do not speak to me about protecting each other.”
I stepped closer, looming over her.
“Where was this sisterly bond three hours ago, Jasmine? Where was the love when you made me get on my knees in front of your staff? Where was the respect when you forced me to wipe caramel off your husband’s shoes with my bare hands?”
I remembered everything.
“I remember looking at you. I remember begging you with my eyes to stop.”
I watched her tremble.
“And do you remember what you did?”
Jasmine’s lips quivered.
“I just wanted everything to be perfect,” she whispered. “I was stressed. I didn’t mean it.”
“You meant every second of it,” I snapped. “You enjoyed it. I saw the look in your eyes. You loved seeing me on the floor. You loved making me feel small because it was the only way you could feel big.”
My voice sharpened again.
“You laughed, Jasmine. You and Chad laughed while I cleaned his rental shoes.”
I took another step.
“You humiliated me to feel powerful.”
I looked down at her, wrecked.
“Well, look at you now. You’re on the floor. You’re begging. And I’m the one standing.”
I turned to the tablet, addressing the sobbing woman on the screen.
“And you, Vera. Tough love? You called me a failure. You threw my gift in the trash. You told me I was useless.”
I didn’t blink.
“That isn’t love. That’s abuse.”
I let the words breathe.
“You broke me down for years, hoping I’d never stand up. But I did stand up.”
My voice went quiet, deadly.
“And now I’m standing on your neck.”
Vera’s sobbing hitched.
“You want family values? Here’s a value for you: you reap what you sow.”
I stared into the lens.
“And you’ve sown nothing but poison for thirty years.”
I looked back at Jasmine, sobbing into the carpet.
“Get up,” I commanded. “Save your tears for the judge. He might care. I certainly don’t.”
I turned to Sterling and gave a single sharp nod.
It was the only command necessary.
He pressed the intercom button, voice calm and authoritative.
“Security to the boardroom immediately. We have trespassers.”
The double doors burst open almost instantly.
Marcus—the head guard from the lobby—marched in, flanked by two burly officers in tactical vests. His heavy boots thudded on the mahogany.
He didn’t salute Jasmine. He didn’t ask for badges.
He looked at me for instruction.
“Remove them,” I said simply. “And Marcus—make sure they don’t take anything that belongs to the company. That includes the laptop, the files, and the dignity they pretended to have.”
Marcus moved with professional speed. He grabbed Chad by the arm and hoisted him up like a sack of flour.
Chad didn’t fight. He hung his head—spirit crushed by the revelation of his infidelity and the looming prison sentence. He walked toward the door willingly, a man marching to his own execution.
Jasmine wasn’t going quietly.
When the second officer reached for her, she lashed out, screaming like a banshee.
“Get your hands off me!” she shrieked, voice echoing off the glass. “Do you know who I am? I’m a CEO. I’m Jasmine Washington. I will have your badge. I will sue this entire building. You can’t treat me like a criminal!”
The officer didn’t blink.
“You are a criminal, ma’am,” he said in a bored tone, clamping a hand around her bicep. “You are causing a disturbance. Now walk—or be dragged.”
Jasmine dug her heels into the expensive carpet, leaving track marks as they hauled her toward the elevator.
She looked back at me, eyes wide with terror and disbelief.
“Tiana, help me,” she begged, the arrogance finally replaced by pure fear. “Please don’t let them take me.”
I watched the elevator doors slide shut, cutting off her screams.
The silence that rushed back into the boardroom was heavy—and sweet.
I walked to the window and looked down.
Sixty stories below, flashing blue lights reflected on wet pavement.
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