At the reading of the will, my sister inherited $6…

At the reading of the will, my sister inherited $6.9 million, while I was left with exactly one dollar. My parents laughed, “You took care of him all that time and got nothing; he must have known you were a fake.” My sister sneered, “Nobody backs you up. You’re pathetic.” They threw my things into the trash and kicked me out… until the lawyer handed me my grandfather’s final letter. That was when my mother started screaming.

Chloe leaned heavily over the mahogany table, her eyes gleaming with deep, sadistic malice. She snatched a copy of the trust document from Mr. Sterling’s assistant, clutching it like a shield.

“Nobody backs you up, Maya,” Chloe sneered, her beautiful face twisting into a hideous, triumphant mask. “You’re pathetic. You always have been. You wasted your twenties playing nanny, pretending you were better than us because ‘you cared,’ and now you’re broke. I’m buying a villa in Tuscany next month. Maybe, if you get desperate enough, I’ll hire you to clean it.”

I couldn’t speak. My throat was completely closed up, blocked by a massive, stabbing knot of grief and shock.

The betrayal didn’t stem from my parents or my sister; I already expected their cruelty. I knew exactly who they were. The betrayal crushing my chest belonged to Arthur. Why had he done this? Why had he subjected me to this final humiliation? Had dementia twisted his mind at the end? Did he truly hate me?

“Get your things out of my house tonight, Maya,” Richard ordered, standing up and abruptly buttoning his custom-tailored suit jacket. He heavily emphasized the word “my.” “The property is legally ours now. Tomorrow morning at eight, the cleaners are coming to fumigate the master suite and the guest wing to get rid of that disgusting hospital smell.”

“Dad, I have nowhere to go,” I whispered, my voice finally cracking. “I gave up my apartment three years ago to move in with Grandpa. I don’t have a job. I don’t have any savings.”

Helen scoffed, picking up her designer purse. “That sounds like a personal problem, Maya. You should have thought about your future instead of trying to scam a dying man out of his fortune. You have until 8:00 PM. If you’re still on the property, I’ll call the police and have you removed for trespassing.”

They didn’t look back. The three of them walked out of the conference room, leaving me sitting alone with Mr. Sterling and the single dollar bill.

I drove back to the sprawling estate in a state of total, terrifying numbness. I didn’t even have the mental capacity to process my grief for Arthur. Survival had instantly become my sole priority.

But by the time my beat-up sedan pulled into the long, winding driveway of the estate, my family’s pure, sociopathic cruelty had already escalated.

Helen and Richard hadn’t waited until 8:00 PM.

They had already hired two day laborers, who were currently hauling my meager belongings out of the guest house. They weren’t packing my things; they were treating me like a squatter who had just been forcefully evicted. They were throwing my favorite books, my clothes, and my framed photos into heavy-duty, black industrial trash bags, aggressively dropping them directly onto the wet curb near the street.

“I said tonight, Maya, but I changed my mind!” Helen shouted from the grand porch, sipping a glass of champagne as she watched me sprint out of the car in a panic to stop my laptop bag from hitting the pavement. “I want the locks changed before dinner! You are trespassing on my property! Pack up your trash and get out!”

I fell to my knees on the wet pavement, frantically gathering my scattered clothes from a torn trash bag, as tears of deep, absolute humiliation finally spilled past my lashes, mixing with the light rain that had begun to fall.

I sat on the curb, surrounded by black plastic bags, holding the single, crumpled one-dollar bill Mr. Sterling had handed me. I was completely alone. I had no money. I had no home.

A sleek, black town car with heavily tinted windows pulled up smoothly against the curb, its tires splashing quietly in the puddles right in front of me.

The rear window rolled down with a soft mechanical hum.

Mr. Sterling was sitting in the back seat.

He wasn’t smiling, but the cold professionalism he had displayed in the conference room was entirely gone. In his eyes was a strange, intense, and terrifying urgency.

“Get in the car, Maya,” Mr. Sterling said, his voice cutting through the sound of the falling rain. “Leave the bags. We can buy you new clothes.”

I stared at him, clutching the wet dollar bill. “Where are we going?”

“Back to my office,” Sterling replied, pushing the heavy leather door open for me. “The initial reading for the parasites is over. It’s time for the secondary execution.”

Chapter 1: The Vultures at the Wake

For four years, the sharp, sterile scent of iodine antiseptic and the warm, comforting aroma of Earl Grey tea had been the absolute boundaries of my entire world.

I was twenty-eight years old, and my name was Maya Lawson. While my parents, Helen and Richard, dedicated themselves to expanding their elite club memberships and hosting lavish, extravagant dinner parties, I lived in the guest suite of my grandfather’s sprawling mansion. While my younger sister, Chloe—the family’s undisputed, golden-child prodigy—was “finding herself” in Paris and Milan on my grandfather’s dime, I was the one changing Arthur’s heavy oxygen tanks. I was the one holding his fragile, trembling hand at three in the morning when the terrifying, hallucinatory shadows of dementia crept into the corners of his room.

Arthur Vance had been a strict but brilliant man, a ruthless, self-made commercial real estate titan who had built an empire from the ground up. He wasn’t a warm person to the world, but to me, he was everything. I didn’t sacrifice my twenties, my career, or my social life for his money; I did it because he was the only person in the Lawson family who ever looked at me and saw a human being, not a disposable accessory or an inconvenience.

When Arthur finally passed away on a rainy Tuesday morning, the grief left me completely hollow. It felt as if a vital organ had been surgically removed from my chest.

My family, however, did not view his death or his subsequent funeral as a tragedy—but rather as a long-awaited corporate merger.

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