“Exactly,” I interrupted. “You didn’t know. And without knowing, you treated me like trash. You sat me at this table, denied me food, humiliated me in front of your in-laws, and told me I should know my place.”

Marlene finally regained her speech, though her voice was trembling. “Wait, wait. This doesn’t make sense. If you have so much money, why do you live in that tiny apartment? Why do you wear simple clothes? Why did you bring a grocery store cake to Khloe’s birthday?”

“Because money doesn’t define who I am,” I answered calmly. “I live modestly because I choose to. I wear simple clothes because I’m comfortable that way. And I bought that cake because my granddaughter loves strawberries. And that cake had the freshest strawberries I could find.”

I looked at her, steady. “I don’t need to prove my worth to anyone with designer labels or luxury cars.”

“But you could have told us,” Michael insisted, and there was something desperate in his voice now. “You could have told us you had all this.”

“For what?” I asked, and I let the question hang in the air for a moment. “So you would treat me well? So you would respect me?”