I remember the lacquer on the folder reflecting the chandelier light and the pressure building in my ears. Someone had prepared these documents and decided the wedding was the right stage for stripping me of my home.
“The penthouse is mine,” I said, my voice getting louder. “Grandmother deeded it to me.”
“Of course she did,” my mother replied smoothly. “Which is precisely why you are able to be generous.”
“This is not generosity,” I said firmly. “This is coercion.”
Diane lowered the microphone slightly, but the front tables could still hear her when she told me to stop being dramatic. She told me to stop making everything about myself, and I laughed because the accusation was so absurd.
“You called me onto a stage and asked me to give away my home,” I pointed out.
“Because if this were done privately, you would hide behind selfishness,” she snapped, extending the pen.
I did not take it. Brianna stepped into the script then, her voice shaking as she said she and Austin just wanted a place to begin.
“You have your career and your freedom,” Brianna said, searching for a word to wound me. “You don’t even really use that place like a family home.”