At My Brother’s Birthday Gala, My Parents Demanded I Fund His Private Jet—My Refusal Shattered…
This story follows Charlotte Hale, the 26-year-old daughter of a wealthy, image-obsessed family who treats her as an invisible servant. When she inherits a massive trust from her grandfather, her family pressures her to sign it over. The conflict explodes at a gala when her father publicly demands she buy her brother a jet. Her refusal leads to a violent assault, shattering the family’s facade. In the ensuing legal battle, Charlotte not only fights for her sanity but exposes a dark secret: her father’s entire empire was built on theft. In the end, her father is jailed, and Charlotte reclaims her grandfather’s true legacy.
The beep, beep, beep of a machine woke me. I smelled antiseptic and soap. My head throbbed. When I tried to open my eyes, my right one was swollen shut. I lifted a hand to my face and felt dried blood on my lip. My cheekbone felt split. My whole body ached, a deep, heavy pain. My mind was thick, like I was underwater. But I could still hear the sound, the terrible, loud crash of glass shattering.
Then the voices came back. My father’s, cold and quiet: “Do not bring shame on this family.” And my mother’s right after, her voice a hiss: “Look what you made him do.”
I was in a hospital. This wasn’t an accident. It had all started at a party, my brother’s birthday. It started with a toast, a pen, and a document. It started because my parents demanded I buy my brother a private jet. It started because I finally said no.
Before we dive in, make sure to like this video, subscribe to the channel, and drop a comment below telling me where in the world you are watching from.
I grew up in a mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut. The long, winding driveway was lined with trees that were older than our country. The house itself was made of stone with ivy crawling up the walls. It looked like something from an old movie. From the outside, it was perfect. We were the perfect family. Inside, it was cold. The floors were marble and the sound of our footsteps echoed. My mother hated noise. She said it was unrefined. We learned to walk quietly. We learned to speak quietly. Our house was not a home. It was a museum, and we were parts of the display.
My father, Richard Hail, was a corporate giant. That’s what the magazines called him. To me, he was a loud, heavy footstep in the hall. He was the smell of expensive cologne and the rustle of the Wall Street Journal. He ran a massive tech company, Hail Innovations. He built it himself. He always said he demanded perfection. He did not tolerate failure. He did not tolerate feelings. Feelings were a weakness, a distraction from success. His office was at the end of the main hall. The doors were dark mahogany. We were never allowed inside unless we were called. I was usually called to bring him coffee or a file I had prepared for him.
My mother, Catherine, was a socialite. Her job was to look beautiful and to host parties that made other women jealous. She was thin, elegant, and her blonde hair was always perfect. Her voice was soft, but her words were sharp. She would look at me and say, “Charlotte, your posture. You are slouching. No one respects a woman who slouches,” or, “That color washes you out. You look pale.” She never said it with anger. She said it with disappointment, which always felt worse. Her entire life was about a calendar: the charity gala, the museum board meeting, the luncheon. My job was to manage that calendar. I had been doing it since I was fourteen. I scheduled her drivers, her hair appointments, and the caterers for her parties.
Then there was my brother, Ethan. Ethan was two years older than me. He was the golden heir. He looked like my father. He had the same charming smile and the same coldness in his eyes. He was the one who mattered. Everything was for Ethan. Ethan was going to take over the company. Ethan was the future of the Hail name. And I was Charlotte. I was the invisible glue. I was the one who made sure the perfect family stayed perfect. My role was simple. I was not allowed to fail. I was not allowed to feel. I was not allowed to need anything. My job was to serve.
I remember when I was fifteen, Ethan had a final history paper due. It was worth half his grade. He was at a party. He had forgotten about it. He came home late, smelling like beer, and laughed. “Oh crap. That paper is due tomorrow.” My mother looked at me. Not at him—at me. “Charlotte, you’re good at history. Help your brother. Help him do it.”
I stayed up all night. I sat in the library surrounded by my father’s old books. I wrote twelve pages on the American Revolution. I was so tired my eyes burned. At 6:00 a.m., I printed it and put it in his backpack. He got an A. He told my father, “I barely even tried.” My father clapped him on the shoulder. “That’s my boy.” Ethan smiled at me over our father’s shoulder. It was a small, mean smile. He knew. I knew. But only his success mattered.
Our family dinners were quiet. They were held in the formal dining room. We sat at a table so long I felt miles away from my father. The only sounds were the clicks of silverware on porcelain.
“Ethan, how was the intern presentation?” my father would ask.
“Killed it,” Ethan would say. “Old man Jacob said it was the best he’d seen.”
“Good. Good,” my mother would smile. “We must celebrate this weekend. I’ll have a small dinner. Just fifty people.”
Then—silence. They would not ask about my day. They would not ask about my schoolwork. I was just the girl who passed the salt. I was smart. I knew I was. I was in advanced placement classes. I was on the debate team. But those things were not important. They were hobbies. Ethan’s C‑plus average was a sign of a relaxed genius. My 4.0 GPA was expected.
One time I was sick. I had the flu, a high fever. I was sixteen. My mother had a fundraising luncheon at the house.
“Charlotte, I need you downstairs,” she called from my bedroom door.
“I’m sick, Mom. I can’t.”
She sighed—that disappointed sigh. “The caterer is missing the serving spoons for the dessert. I can’t find the silver ones. You always know where they are. Can you please just get up and handle it?”
I dragged myself out of bed. My head was spinning. I went to the silver closet, found the spoons, and gave them to the staff. I sorted out a problem with the flower arrangements. I fixed the seating chart because two women who hated each other were placed at the same table. When it was all done, my mother patted my arm. “There, that wasn’t so hard, was it? Now go back to bed. And please don’t breathe on the guests.”
I was a tool. I was a manager. I was a problem solver. I was never a daughter.
My bedroom was in the back of the house. It was small. My mother said it was cozy. It was the old nanny’s quarters. Ethan’s room was a full suite with its own bathroom and a balcony. My little room was my only space. But even there, I wasn’t safe. My family left lists for me on my desk: “Charlotte, pick up my dry cleaning.” “Charlotte, call the repairman for the pool filter.” “Charlotte, Ethan needs his suit pressed for Friday.” I existed to smooth out the bumps in their lives. I was the shock absorber for the Hail family. My needs, my dreams, my feelings—they were just bumps, and they were smoothed out until they were flat. Until I was flat, invisible, quiet.
That was the perfect cage. It was beautiful. It was expensive. And it was suffocating. I was raised to hold the bars, not to shake them. I was raised to serve the people who lived inside it with me. The pattern started so early, I don’t even remember a time before it. I was trained like a dog to put my needs last.
My first memory is not of being held. It is of being told to be quiet because my father was working.
When I was six and Ethan was eight, we both got an allowance. He spent his in one day on candy and toys. I saved mine. I put the dollars in a little pink piggy bank. I wanted a bicycle. I saved for months. One day, I came home from school and my piggy bank was gone from my dresser. I ran to my mother.
“Mom, where is my pig?”
She was addressing invitations. She didn’t look up. “Ethan needed money for his school field trip. You don’t mind, do you? It’s good to share, Charlotte.”
I did mind. I minded a lot, but I just stood there. I had learned that “no” was a bad word. “No” meant I was selfish. “No” meant I was not a good daughter. So I said, “It’s okay.”
Ethan got to go on the trip. I never got the bicycle. My parents bought him a new, expensive ten‑speed bike for his birthday a few months later.
“He’s a growing boy. He needs the exercise,” my father said.
As we got older, the pattern just got stronger. My efforts were not mine. They were family resources. Ethan’s opportunities were more important.
When I was sixteen, I got a job at a local tutoring center. I was good at math and science. I worked twenty hours a week. For two years, I saved every dollar I earned. I put it all into a savings account. I had almost $8,000. It was my escape money. I dreamed of using it for a deposit on an apartment or for a trip to Europe after graduation. A trip just for me. It was the first thing that was truly mine.
I came home one day from school. It was a Tuesday. My parents were in the kitchen. They were celebrating. They had champagne open.
“What’s going on?” I asked.
“We did it, darling,” my mother cheered. She was flushed and happy. “We just closed on the most wonderful beach house in the Hamptons.”
“Wow, that’s great,” I said.
My father smiled at me. It was a rare, broad smile. “And you helped make it happen, Charlotte. We were a little short on the deposit. Richard pulled the funds from your savings account this morning. It was just what we needed to get the deal done.”
I stopped breathing. $8,000. My money. My work.
“You—you took my money?”
My father’s smile faded. His eyes went cold. “I didn’t take it. I used it. It’s for the family. You are part of this family, are you not?”
I looked at my mother. Her smile was gone, too. She looked annoyed. “Charlotte, don’t be difficult. You’ll love the house. We will all be so happy there. You should be proud you could contribute.”
“But that was my money,” I whispered. My hands were shaking.
“And we gave you a roof over your head,” my father snapped. “We pay for your food, your clothes, your school. Do not be ungrateful. That money was our money sitting in your name. It’s for the family.”
“It’s for the family”—that was the sentence that ended every argument. It was the sentence that erased me.
I went up to my room. I didn’t cry. I just sat on my bed and felt hollow, empty. It didn’t matter what I did. It didn’t matter how hard I worked. I was not a person. I was a piggy bank. I was a resource, and they could break me open whenever they wanted. The worst part was that I never saw a dollar of it again. And when we went to the Hamptons house, Ethan got the master guest suite. I got the small bedroom by the laundry room.
The pattern was not just about money. It was about my light. My role was not to shine. My role was to make Ethan brighter.
In my senior year of high school, I spent months working on a project for the state science fair. It was about genetic sequencing. I loved the work. It was precise, logical, and true. It was everything my family was not. I won. I won first place in the state. I got a large blue ribbon, a small trophy, and a $5,000 scholarship to any university in the state. I drove home, and for the first time, I felt something bubble in my chest. It felt like pride.
I walked into the house holding the trophy. My father, my mother, and Ethan were in the living room. They were arguing about what color Ethan’s new car should be.
“I won,” I said, holding up the trophy. “I won the state science fair.”
My mother glanced over. “Oh, that’s nice, dear. That’s very nice.” She turned back to Ethan. “The black is more elegant, Ethan. The red is too flashy.”
“Red is fast,” Ethan said.
“Dad, I won. I got a scholarship.”
My father looked at me. He looked at the trophy. He nodded once. “Good. That’s good, Charlotte. Good work.” He then looked at his phone. “Now I have to make a call. Ethan, decide on the car. I’m paying for it. I want it to be a color I can stand to look at.” He walked out of the room.
I just stood there. The trophy felt heavy. It felt stupid. I took it to my room. I did not put it on my shelf. I opened my closet, pushed aside my old sweaters, and I set it on the floor in the back. I closed the door.
My light was not welcome. It was a distraction. It took the spotlight off Ethan. I had broken the rules. I had tried to shine. I learned my lesson. I stopped talking about my successes.
I went to college locally at UConn. I lived at home. It was cheaper. I majored in business and finance, not because I loved it—I loved science—but my father said finance was practical. “You’re good with numbers, Charlotte,” he said. “You can help me manage the family accounts. You can help Ethan.”
Help Ethan. I was being trained to be his servant—his financial manager, his invisible assistant—for the rest of my life. My selflessness was not a choice. It was my job. It was my servitude. And I was so tired of it.
There was one person who saw me. His name was Arthur Gable. He was my mother’s father. He was nothing like them. My grandfather was not a man who cared about appearances. He lived in a small, cluttered house upstate. He wore cardigans with holes in the elbows. The house smelled like pipe tobacco, old books, and sawdust from his workshop. My mother hated visiting him. She said he was eccentric and didn’t live up to his potential. But he was brilliant. He was an inventor. He held dozens of patents for medical technology. He was a scientist, like I wanted to be.
When I was a child, he would sit with me on his porch. He wouldn’t talk at me. He would ask me questions. “What are you reading, Charlie?” he’d call me. “What are you thinking about? Show me that rock you found. Let’s look at it under the microscope.” He saw my mind. He didn’t care if my posture was straight. He didn’t care if I was quiet. He loved that I was quiet. “You’re a thinker,” he’d say, tapping his temple. “That’s the most valuable thing a person can be.”
He knew what my family was like. He would look at me with sad, kind eyes when I told him about my life. I didn’t even have to say the bad parts. He just knew.
“Don’t let them grind you down, Charlie,” he told me just a few months before he died. I was twenty‑two. “You’re made of stronger stuff. You’re made of my stuff.”
He died quietly in his sleep. At the funeral, my mother cried for the cameras. My father looked at his watch. A week later, his lawyer, Mr. Harrison, called me. He asked me to come to his office alone. I sat in a leather chair. Mr. Harrison was an older man with the same kind eyes as my grandfather.
“Your grandfather was a very wise man, Charlotte,” he said. “He was also a very private man. He set up a specific trust many years ago. It was separate from his main estate, which your mother inherited.” He slid a document across the desk. “He left you this. It’s a blind trust. He named me as the executor. The terms are very simple. It becomes your property in full on your twenty‑fifth birthday. Not a day before.”
I looked at the numbers. I read them. I read them again. My hands started to shake. It was millions of dollars.
“This… this can’t be right,” I whispered.
“It’s right,” Mr. Harrison said gently. “Your grandfather was very successful—more than your family knew. He kept most of his assets hidden from them. He wanted you to have this.” He pointed to a line—a small handwritten note from my grandfather, scanned into the legal document. “For Charlie—for you and you alone—to build your own life. Don’t let them take it. Be free.”
I started to cry. It was the first time I had cried in years. It wasn’t just about the money. It was about him. He saw me. He saw what was happening. And he gave me a key. He gave me a way out of the cage.
“The trust is airtight,” Mr. Harrison said. “It cannot be touched by anyone. Not your father. Not your mother. It is yours. On your twenty‑fifth birthday,”—he tapped the page—”I transfer control to you.”
I walked out of that office feeling like I was floating. I had a secret. I had a future. I had a promise.
For two years, I kept it secret. I continued to be the quiet, obedient daughter. I managed the house. I helped Ethan with his projects. I finished my degree in finance. I bided my time.
But my family’s perfect world was starting to crack. My father’s company, Hail Innovations, was built on one major product—a piece of medical scanning technology. I learned later that my grandfather had invented the prototype. My father had partnered with him, taken the idea, and built his empire. Now, that technology was old. The patents were expiring. The company was in trouble. My father needed money. He needed capital.
They must have had a lawyer checking on my grandfather’s estate because a week before my twenty‑fifth birthday, the war began. I was called into my father’s office—the dark mahogany doors. My mother was there, sitting in a chair, twisting her pearls. Ethan was leaning against the desk, smirking.
“Charlotte,” my father said—he didn’t ask me to sit—”we have become aware of the trust your grandfather left you.”
My blood went cold.
“It is a significant sum,” he continued. “A sum you are not prepared to manage.”
“It’s my money,” I said. My voice was a whisper.
“It is family money,” my father corrected me. His voice was hard. “Your grandfather was part of this family. That money belongs in this family. It will be used to secure this family’s future.” He slid a document across the desk. It was a legal form. It would give him power of attorney. It would transfer control of the trust to him. “Sign this,” he said.
I looked at him. I looked at my mother, who was nodding. “It’s for the best, dear.” I looked at Ethan, who was looking at his fingernails, bored. I thought of my grandfather. Don’t let them take it. Be free.
“No,” I said.
The room went completely silent. My father’s face did not change, but his eyes—his eyes went dark.
“What did you say?”
“I said no. Grandfather left it for me.”
My mother gasped. “Charlotte, how can you be so selfish?” She started to cry. The tears were always her weapon. “After everything we have given you, you would ruin us. You would ruin your brother’s future.”
My father stood up. He was a tall man. He leaned over the desk. “You are being a fool, Charlotte. You will sign this paper.”
“No.”
He slammed his hand on the desk. The sound made me jump. “You ungrateful child. You live under my roof. You eat my food. You will do as I say.”
“It’s my money,” I said again. I was shaking, but I held my ground.
“Get out,” he hissed. “Get out of my sight.”
I ran to my room. I locked the door. I heard them shouting downstairs. My mother was sobbing. My father was roaring.
Later, Ethan knocked on my door. His voice was soft—fake soft. “Char, come on, open up. Let’s talk about this.”
I stayed silent.
“Don’t be this way,” he said. “You know how Dad gets. Just sign the papers. It’s just money. We’re family. Just sign it and everything can go back to normal.”
I put my head on my knees. “Go away, Ethan.”
His voice changed. The kindness was gone. “You’re a stupid little—you know that? You think you’re better than us? You’re nothing. You’re just the help.” He stormed off.
The war had begun. And for the first time in my life, I had a shield. I had my grandfather’s promise.
The year between my twenty‑fifth birthday and Ethan’s gala was a living hell. My refusal to sign the papers did not end the conversation. It just started the siege. My family did not fight fair. They did not argue. They manipulated. They threatened. They tried to break me.
My twenty‑fifth birthday came. I went to Mr. Harrison’s office and signed the papers. The trust was mine. I was, on paper, a wealthy woman. When I came home, my father was waiting. He had found out. He must have had his own lawyers watching.
“So,” he said, standing in the foyer. “It’s done.”
“Yes,” I said.
“You have made a very serious mistake, Charlotte. You have declared war on this family.”
“I haven’t,” I said, my voice small. “I just want what’s mine.”
“What is yours,” he sneered, “is the direct result of my hard work. The roof over your head, the education I gave you. You are nothing without me.”
From that day on, he treated me like I didn’t exist. He would not speak to me. He would not look at me. At dinner, he would ask my mother to “tell Charlotte to pass the salt.” It was a cold, suffocating silence.
He cut off my credit card. He took away the small car I used. He was trying to prove I couldn’t survive without him. But I had my own money now. I opened my own bank account. I bought my own phone on my own plan. I started making my own plans—quietly.
My mother’s tactic was guilt. She used tears as her currency. She would find me in the kitchen, in the library, in my room.
“Charlotte, you are killing your father,” she would whisper, her eyes full of tears. “The stress—his heart. He isn’t sleeping. He built this company for us, for you, for Ethan.”
“He built it for himself,” I said.
“How can you be so cruel?” she would sob. “You are ruining this family. You are tearing us apart. Ethan is so disappointed in you. He looks up to you.”
That was a lie so big I almost laughed. Ethan had never looked at me unless he wanted something.
“Mom, please stop.”
“I will not stop. I am your mother. I am trying to save you from yourself. You don’t know anything about the world. You’re not capable of managing that money. Men will take advantage of you. You will lose it all. Your father just wants to protect it. To protect you.”
“He wants to protect Ethan,” I said.
“Ethan’s future is this family’s future. Why can’t you understand that? Why must you be so selfish?”
This happened every day—sometimes twice a day. It was like a slow‑acting poison. I started to doubt myself. Was I selfish? Was I destroying them? Was I the villain?
Ethan tried a different way. He tried to be the good brother.
“Hey, Char,” he’d say, leaning against my doorframe. “Look, I know Dad’s being an ass and Mom is—well, she’s Mom—but they’re scared. The company isn’t doing great.”
“I know,” I said.
“I have this huge deal I’m working on—a new tech venture. It could save everything. It could make Hail Innovations bigger than ever. But I need capital. I need investors.” He paused. He gave me his charming smile. “You’re an investor now, right? You could invest in me—in the family. It would fix everything. Dad would get off your back. We could be a team.”
“You want my money, Ethan?”
“I want our money to save our family,” he said. “Come on—just help me out.”
“No, Ethan. I’m not giving you my money.”
His smile vanished. “You really are a cold‑hearted—Grandfather ruined you.”
“No,” I said, looking him right in the eye. “He saved me.”
The pressure was constant. But the worst part was my father’s new plan. He started telling people I was unwell. I would overhear him on the phone: “Yes, it’s a terrible shame. Charlotte is not herself. She’s fragile—very unstable. We’re looking into getting her help.” My mother did the same with her friends: “We’re so worried. She’s had a breakdown. She’s delusional. She thinks she’s inherited a fortune. It’s all very sad.”
They were building a story. They were painting me as crazy. They were laying the groundwork to take the money from me by proving I was not sane enough to have it. I was terrified.
I went to see Mr. Harrison. I was sneaking out of my own house. I felt like a criminal.
“They’re trying to say I’m crazy,” I told him, my voice shaking in his quiet office.
He nodded. He looked calm. “I expected this. Richard is a predictable man.”
“What do I do?”
“You do nothing,” he said. “You live your life. You let them talk, but you also prepare.”
He pulled a file from his desk. “Your grandfather was wise, Charlotte. He knew Richard would try this. He built this trust to protect you from them. He included letters from your childhood doctors, psychological evaluations you had for school, academic records, letters from himself detailing his concerns about your father’s controlling nature.” He tapped the thick file. “Your grandfather built you a fortress, Charlotte. And he gave me the keys. This trust is not just money. It is an arsenal. Richard is bringing a knife to a gunfight. He just doesn’t know it yet.”
I felt a small, hard kernel of strength in my chest. My grandfather had seen it all. He had planned for this exact battle. I was not alone.
“What do I do now?” I asked.
“Now,” Mr. Harrison said, “you wait. Your father is a proud man. He will not keep this fight private. He will try to humiliate you into submission. He will make a public move. And when he does, we will be ready.”
I went home. The pressure continued—the whispers, the tears, the cold silence. But it felt different. I was no longer just the obedient daughter. I was a target, yes, but I was also a fortress.
A week later, a thick cream‑colored envelope was on my pillow. My hands were steady as I opened it.
You are invited to celebrate the 28th birthday of Ethan Hail.
It was a gala—a huge, extravagant party at the most expensive ballroom in the city. Hundreds of guests, all of my father’s business partners, investors, and friends. I knew in my bones this was it. This was the public stage. This was where he would try to break me for good.
I went to the gala. I knew it was a trap. I spent the whole day feeling sick. I could not eat. I stayed in my room. My mother did not knock to tell me to get my hair done. They were leaving me alone. That was scarier than the shouting.
I did not wear the dress my mother had bought for me. It was a dark blue heavy satin dress. It felt like a uniform. Instead, I chose a simple black dress I had bought myself. It was plain. It had long sleeves. I felt covered. I felt a little stronger. I put my hair up in a simple twist. I did not wear the Hail family diamonds my mother had set out. I wore a small silver locket. It was my grandfather’s.
When I walked down the main staircase, my family was waiting in the foyer. My father was in a perfect tuxedo. My mother was in a sparkling silver gown. Ethan was preening, his hair slicked back. He looked like a bad movie villain.
My mother saw me. Her face tightened. “Is that what you are wearing?” she hissed. “You look like a servant.”
“I am comfortable,” I said.
My father looked at me, a long, cold look. “It does not matter. Let’s go.”
The car ride was silent. The silence was loud. It was filled with what we were not saying. My father was going to do this. He was going to do this in front of everyone.
We arrived at the ballroom. It was a sea of people. Cameras flashed as we walked in. The Hail family—perfect, beautiful, powerful. I smiled. I was trained to smile. My muscles knew how to do it, even if my mind was screaming.
“Richard! Catherine! Wonderful to see you.” People came up to us. They shook my father’s hand. They kissed my mother’s cheek. “And this must be Ethan—happy birthday, son. You’re the man of the hour.”
Ethan laughed. “Thank you. Thank you. It’s a great night.”
Then they would look at me.
“And your daughter, Charlotte,” my mother would say, her voice tight. “Yes.” I could hear the whispers as we walked away. “That’s the one I told you about—the unwell one. She looks so pale. It’s a tragedy.”
My father’s plan was working. He had already painted me as a ghost.
I spent two hours walking through the party. I held a glass of water. I smiled. I nodded. I did not say much. I found a corner near a large pillar and I just watched. I watched my father laugh. I watched my mother glide through the crowd, a queen. I watched Ethan accept congratulations like he had just cured a disease.
I felt completely, totally alone. I was in a room with five hundred people and I was invisible. Or worse, I was a prop. I was the sad, broken part of their perfect display.
I thought about leaving. I could just walk out the door. But I knew I could not. This was it. Mr. Harrison was right. My father was a proud man. He had to do this publicly. I had to see it through.
Then the lights dimmed. A spotlight hit the stage. My father walked up to the microphone.
“Good evening,” he said. His voice was deep. It filled the room. “Thank you all for coming. Tonight we celebrate my son—my heir—Ethan.”
The crowd applauded. Ethan stood up and bowed.
My father spoke for ten minutes. He talked about Ethan’s brilliance. He talked about Ethan’s vision. He talked about the future of Hail Innovations.
“Ethan is ready to take this company to the next level,” my father said. “He is working on a new global initiative—a project that will change the face of our industry. But to do that, he needs the right tools.”
I felt my stomach clench. Here it comes.
“He needs to be able to move, to fly, to be where the deals are at a moment’s notice. He needs a jet.”
The crowd murmured, impressed. “And we, as a family, are going to provide it.”
My father’s eyes scanned the crowd, and then they landed on me. He smiled. It was a cold, terrible smile.
“We are so proud of all our children,” he said. “My daughter Charlotte has recently come into her inheritance from her grandfather—a very, very significant amount.”
Every single person in the room turned to look at me. Five hundred pairs of eyes. I felt hot. I felt like I was going to be sick. The spotlight left my father and moved. It found me in my corner by the pillar. I was pinned.
“And Charlotte, in her incredible generosity, has decided to use that family money to secure her brother’s future—to secure the Hail future.”
My mother was beaming. The tears in her eyes were for the performance.
“Charlotte,” my father said, holding out his hand. “Please come up here.”
I could not move. My feet were concrete. Someone behind me pushed my arm. “Go on,” they whispered.
I walked. It felt like I was walking through mud. The stage was a mile away. I could hear the click of my own shoes. I could hear my heart. When I reached the stage, my father put his arm around my shoulder. It was heavy. It felt like a chain. The crowd applauded. They were applauding my generosity.
My father held the microphone. “She is a wonderful daughter,” he said.
Ethan walked onto the stage. He was holding a leather folder and a pen—an expensive, heavy gold pen. My father took the folder. He opened it.
“This document simply transfers the management of her grandfather’s trust to the Hail Family Fund to allow us to make this and other important investments.”
He handed me the pen. The cameras were flashing—bright white lights. I was blind. I looked at the paper. It was what I’d seen before: the power of attorney—the document that would give him everything.
“Sign it, daughter,” my father whispered, so only I could hear. His arm tightened on my shoulder. It hurt. The crowd was applauding. They were waiting. They were smiling.
I looked at my father’s cold eyes. I looked at my mother, who was mouthing the words, “Smile, Charlotte. Smile.” I looked at Ethan, who was holding the folder, smirking at me. He thought he had won. They all thought they had won. I thought of my grandfather. Be free, Charlie.
I was holding the pen. My hand was shaking. I looked down at the paper, at the line where my name was supposed to go. Then I looked up. I looked past the lights. I looked at the crowd of strangers and I said one word.
“No.”
