I sat at the far end of the table, occupying the chair with the wobbly leg—the designated spot for the “mistake” of the family. At twenty-eight, I was still treated like the rebellious teenager who had gotten pregnant at nineteen and dropped out of State College. To my mother, Eleanor, and my father, Robert, I was a cautionary tale. To my older sister, Vanessa, I was a prop used to make her shine brighter.
“So,” Vanessa began, swirling her Chardonnay and making sure her new engagement ring caught the light. “I finally got the title bump. Senior Vice President of Marketing at Henderson Global. It’s a massive responsibility, but someone has to carry the family legacy of success.”
My mother clapped her hands together, her eyes beaming with a pride she had never once directed at me. “Oh, Vanessa! That is spectacular! See? This is what focus gets you. No distractions, no… detours.”
Her eyes flickered to me for a nanosecond. The “detour” was my daughter, Sophie.
I took a bite of dry turkey and said nothing. I looked down at my phone, which was resting face-down on the tablecloth. It had just vibrated with a notification. A wire transfer from my offshore holdings in the Caymans had cleared. $2.4 million—the payout from a tech startup I had seed-funded three years ago.
They saw Maya, the dropout who scraped by doing “freelance computer stuff.”
They didn’t know they were sitting with the founder of Obsidian Systems, a boutique crisis management and venture capital firm that specialized in hostile takeovers and high-risk asset recovery. I wasn’t just wealthy; I was the kind of wealthy that bought the people who bought the people my sister worked for.
“Maya, are you still doing that… internet thing?” my father asked, his voice gruff. He didn’t look at me. He rarely did. “Vanessa says Henderson is looking for a receptionist. Front desk. It pays twenty-two an hour. It comes with dental.”