You’re not a sister, Mira — you’re a tax write-off our parents kept for

My father stood, tapped his glass, and began the speech I’d heard him rehearse in the study: legacy, bloodline, the future of Vance Logistics in Damon’s capable hands. Damon rose, buttoned his jacket, and beamed. Then the double doors opened. In walked Mr. Aoki, our largest overseas client — the man whose contracts kept the company breathing. He did not look at Damon. He walked the length of the table, stopped beside my chair, and bowed. “Ms. Vance,” he said. “We are ready when you are.” The room went so quiet I could hear my mother’s earrings tremble. I stood slowly. From my notebook I slid a single folder and placed it in front of my father. Inside: signed letters from our top seven clients — Aoki, Lindqvist, Park, Okafor, every name that mattered — confirming they would only renew under the new holding company I had quietly built over the last three years. The company I owned. The company that already employed half our warehouse staff at better wages. “I wasn’t helping around the office, Dad,” I said. “I was building the exit.” Damon’s bourbon glass hit the table. “You can’t — those are our accounts —” “They’re relationships,” I said. “You never learned the difference.” My father’s face drained as he flipped page after page. My mother finally looked at me, really looked, for the first time since I was nine. I turned to Damon, who’d called me a tax write-off ten minutes ago in front of everyone he wanted to impress. “Congratulations on the title,” I said softly. “Enjoy the letterhead.” Then I picked up my coat. Mr. Aoki offered his arm. As we reached the doors, I heard my father’s voice crack behind me — “Mira, wait” — the first time he’d ever said my name like it mattered. I didn’t turn around. Some doors you only get to walk through once.

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