At Easter dinner, my sister threw my daughter’s handmade gift into the trash while bragging about her upcoming corporate buyou

The gravel crunching under the tires of my ten-year-old sedan sounded like an apology. It was a stark, grinding contrast to the smooth, paved silence of my parents’ circular driveway, which was already occupied by a gleaming white Range Rover and my father’s vintage Mercedes.

“Mommy, are we going to stay long?” Sophie asked from the backseat. Her voice was small, tight with the intuitive anxiety that children often develop before their parents do. She was five years old, clutching a small, colorful object wrapped carefully in tissue paper.

“Just for dinner, sweetie,” I said, catching her eye in the rearview mirror. “Grandma and Grandpa want to celebrate Aunt Chloe’s big news.”

“Aunt Chloe doesn’t like my clothes,” Sophie whispered.

“I know,” I replied, unbuckling my seatbelt. “But we’ll be quiet. We’ll be invisible. Just like always.”

I checked my reflection in the visor mirror. I wore a simple beige cardigan over a plain blouse, and jeans that had seen better days. My hair was pulled back in a messy bun. To the outside world, and specifically to my family, I was Maya the struggling single mom. Maya, the art school dropout. Maya, the family disappointment.

They didn’t see the woman who had spent the last seven years building AURA Holdings from a laptop in a basement into a global supply-chain and cosmetics empire worth four billion dollars. They didn’t know that the “remote data entry job” I told them about was actually me managing the manufacturing of the world’s leading luxury beauty brands.

I kept my life separate for a reason. My father, Arthur, valued high-society status above his own soul. My mother, Eleanor, valued appearances above love. And my sister, Chloe… Chloe valued absolutely nothing but herself.

We walked to the front door. I didn’t knock; I just walked in.

The house smelled of expensive catered salmon and heavy floral perfume. It was a smell that used to make me nauseous as a teenager—the scent of performed perfection.

“Oh, look, the charity ward has arrived,” Chloe’s voice rang out from the living room.

I walked in, holding Sophie’s hand tightly. Chloe was lounging on the Italian leather sofa, holding a glass of champagne. She was a major beauty influencer and the founder of Glow & Co., a “luxury organic” skincare line. She was dressed in a tailored crimson silk dress. My parents were beaming at her like she was a deity who had deigned to visit mortals.

“Hi, Chloe,” I said softly. “Hi, Mom. Dad.”

“Maya,” my mother sighed, not getting up. She scanned my outfit with a look of pained tolerance. “I thought I sent you that box of Chloe’s old clothes? That sweater is… pilling.”

“I like this sweater,” I said.

“Well, try not to sit on the silk chairs,” my father grunted, his eyes glued to his phone, probably checking his golf handicap. “We’re having the Country Club board members over later.”

“So, did you hear?” Chloe asked, swirling her drink. “Glow & Co. is about to be acquired. A massive European beauty conglomerate. AURA Holdings. You probably haven’t heard of them, Maya. They don’t operate in the… dollar-store sector.”

I stifled a smile. “AURA Holdings? Sounds impressive.”

“It is,” Chloe preened. “They approached me. Apparently, they’ve been mesmerized by my brand’s organic luxury image for months. They want to buy the firm for eight figures and keep me on as the global face. Imagine that.”

I didn’t have to imagine. I had approved the term sheet three hours ago. But I hadn’t bought Glow & Co. for Chloe’s image. I bought it because I knew the company was drowning in secret debt, and despite everything, I wanted to save my sister from bankruptcy. It was my final, pathetic attempt at being a sister before being a shark.

“That’s wonderful, Chloe,” I said.

“It is,” she sneered. “Maybe now you can stop being such a depressing shadow on this family.”

I hadn’t asked my parents for a dime in a decade. But Arthur liked to tell his Country Club friends he supported me; it made him look like a benevolent patriarch.

“Come on,” Eleanor clapped her hands. “Dinner is served. Let’s toast to the new millionaire in the family.”

We moved to the dining room, unaware that the real billionaire was already sitting silently at the end of their table.

Continue to Part 2 Part 1 of 3

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