Dessert came out, and with it, Marlene’s husband Doug stood up to make his big announcement. “We’re expanding the construction company,” he beamed. “We’ve already picked our new silent investor — some hotshot from Boston flying in Monday. Marlene and I will finally be in the seven figures.” The whole table clapped. Marlene shot me a pitying look. “Maybe one day, Han, you’ll understand what real ambition looks like.” I set down my fork. “Actually,” I said softly, “I’d love to hear more about this investor. What’s the firm called?” Doug puffed up. “Kestrel Holdings. Why, you read Forbes at the laundromat now?” Laughter. I reached into my purse and slid a business card across the mahogany table. Heavy cream stock. Embossed letters. *Hannah Reyes — Managing Partner, Kestrel Holdings.* The room went silent. Doug picked it up with shaking fingers. “This… this is a joke.” “It isn’t,” I said. “I founded Kestrel four years ago. I kept it quiet because Mom asked me to — she didn’t want the family treating me differently while she was sick. I’m the hotshot flying in Monday, Doug. Except I already flew in.” Marlene’s wine glass froze halfway to her lips. “Then why — the car, the studio, the pie —” “Because every cent I made went to Mom’s care,” I said. “The care you two said was ‘too expensive to bother with.’ The care you stopped visiting after month two.” I stood, smoothing my secondhand blazer. “As for the investment — I reviewed your books on the plane. You’re over-leveraged, you’ve misreported two subcontractors, and you’ve been using Mom’s old cosigned line of credit without telling her. Kestrel is passing. And first thing Monday, I’m transferring her credit line into a protected trust.” Marlene whispered, “Hannah, please—” I picked up my grocery-store pie, walked to the kids’ table, and cut a slice for each twin. “Eat up, sweethearts,” I smiled. “Aunt Hannah’s buying everyone real dessert next year. At her table.”
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