David walked into the kitchen, entirely unbothered by the storm outside or the one brewing inside. He loosened his silk tie, tossing his leather briefcase onto the pristine marble island. For three years, David had operated under the absolute delusion that he owned everything in his field of vision. He had a way of occupying a room that made everyone else feel like a trespasser.
“You transferred the money,” I said, my voice dangerously quiet. I didn’t look up from the screen.
He didn’t flinch. He poured himself a generous glass of bourbon, the crystal clinking softly. “Our money, Sarah.”
“My inheritance,” I corrected, finally lifting my eyes to meet his. “The trust left to me by my mother.”
His mouth curled into a patronizing, asymmetrical smirk—a look I had come to despise. “Your father’s charity. You weren’t managing it effectively. I moved it to a higher-yield account. You should be thanking me.”
Before I could demand the routing numbers, a soft, deliberate footstep echoed from the hallway. Margaret, his mother, stepped into the kitchen. She moved as if she held the deed to the property, dripping with inherited entitlement and wearing her signature string of pearls. She looked at me with an expression of weaponized pity.
“Don’t make this ugly, Sarah,” Margaret sighed, swirling her own glass of Chardonnay. “You were never good with financial pressure. David is simply taking the burden off your shoulders. You know how fragile you can be when you’re overwhelmed.”
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