It had attracted corporations.
Weeks earlier, when the farm’s profits exploded, I was approached by Verdant Ventures, a massive agricultural investment corporation. They sent soil specialists to inspect my lavender fields. Dr. Amelia Brennan, the agricultural consultant who originally helped me build the farm, confirmed my land’s unique topography made it one of the highest-yield independent lavender operations on the East Coast.
Verdant Ventures wanted to buy me out.
At first, I refused fiercely. I had bled for this soil. I had frozen inside that house. This farm was part of my soul. But after my lawyer, Amanda Cortez, discovered Garrett’s catastrophic crypto losses and the financial storm surrounding my family, she sat me down in her Manhattan office for a brutal reality check.
“Sienna, your family is coming for this property,” Amanda warned two weeks earlier. “Your father handled the original deed transfer sloppily. If Garrett’s creditors push him into bankruptcy, your parents will exploit every legal loophole possible to seize the farm and liquidate it. You need protection they can’t touch.”
So Amanda organized the perfect counterattack.
Staring at the PDF on my laptop, I reviewed the finalized contract. I hadn’t merely protected the farm.
I had monetized it beyond my wildest dreams.
Months earlier, I quietly sold the entire estate to Verdant Ventures for an astonishing $2.85 million. The paperwork was already signed. The funds were already secured inside a protected corporate trust my family could never access.
But here was the beautiful twist: Verdant understood the farm’s value depended on my face and my story. As part of the sale agreement, I retained complete operational control. Officially, I became Managing Director of the estate under an ironclad contract guaranteeing me a $185,000 annual salary plus a three-percent equity share of all net profits.
I no longer owned the dirt.
A multi-billion-dollar corporation did.
And Verdant’s corporate security division did not tolerate trespassers.
The following two days became psychological warfare at its finest. I ignored Garrett’s threatening voicemails. I ignored my father’s condescending emails telling me to “be a good sister and do the right thing.” Instead, I calmly worked in my lavender fields, watching the purple waves sway beneath the wind while a dangerous thrill built inside me.
Then the deadline arrived.
July 14, 2024.
I stood at the edge of the driveway wearing a fitted blazer over my work jeans while the morning mist lifted off the fields. Right on schedule, I heard the deep rumble of a diesel engine. A huge moving truck rolled onto my gravel road, followed closely by my mother’s Mercedes and my father’s spotless Audi.
Garrett was driving the truck.
He slammed it into park and jumped out wearing a smug grin, holding a stack of flattened cardboard boxes like he genuinely expected to throw me into the street. My parents stepped out beside him like victorious conquerors arriving to claim spoils.
They marched toward me ready to take everything I loved.
But none of them had looked beyond the trees yet.
None of them had seen what was waiting.
Part 3
Garrett stormed up the gravel driveway and tossed the cardboard boxes at my feet.
“Time’s up, Sienna,” he sneered, his bloodshot eyes revealing the crushing pressure of his debts. “A real estate appraiser is arriving in two hours. Pack your junk and leave.”
My mother folded her arms smugly. Even my father, Douglas, looked completely unmoved by the fact they were about to make their only daughter homeless.
I didn’t flinch.
I simply smiled.
A slow, terrifyingly calm smile that made Garrett hesitate.
“You’re actually late, Garrett,” I said evenly. “The appraisal already happened. Honestly, a lot of things already happened.”
Before he could process my words, the sound of multiple vehicles entering the driveway shattered the silence. But it wasn’t the sheriff.