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.
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