They Mocked Me at My Brother’s Engagement – Then I Revealed I Own the Company They Work For and…
The Stolen Inheritance
Garrett finally noticed me and made his way over. My big brother, three years older, still looking at me like I was his annoying little sister who followed him around when we were kids.
He said “he was glad I could come” Though his tone said he hadn’t noticed whether I was there or not.
He asked if I’d met Sloan yet and said “she was amazing” I told him I’d seen her. I kept my opinions to myself.
Garrett nodded, already looking past me to see who else he needed to greet. Some things never change.
Then he said something that made my stomach tighten. He mentioned that mom had given Sloan Grandma’s necklace as an engagement gift.
He said “Wasn’t that generous of her?” And that “Sloan absolutely loved it”
I felt the air leave my lungs. Grandma’s necklace, the antique pendant our grandmother had promised to me specifically before she died.
She had held my hand and told me it was for me because I was her dreamer, her fighter, the one who would make something of herself. My mother knew this.
She had been in the room when grandma said it, and she gave it to Sloan anyway. I looked across the room and saw it there.
It was hanging around Sloan’s neck like it belonged there. My grandmother’s necklace, my inheritance, my memory, sparkling under the chandelier lights while Sloan laughed at something someone said.
The DJ cranked up the music so loud I could feel my fillings vibrate. If I wanted my teeth rattled, I would have just gone to the dentist; at least there I’d get a free toothbrush out of the experience.
Cracks in the Facade
I excused myself from Garrett and made my way to the restroom, needing a moment to breathe. That’s when I passed Franklin Whitmore in the hallway, his phone pressed to his ear, his face tight with stress.
He didn’t see me; he was too focused on his conversation. I heard him say “they needed this wedding to happen that the Burns family had money enough to cover their situation”
He paused, listening to whoever was on the other end. Then he said “they just needed to get through the ceremony and after that everything would work out”
He hung up and walked back toward the party, his salesman’s smile sliding back into place like a mask. I stood frozen in that hallway, my grandmother’s necklace forgotten for the moment, replaced by something much more urgent.
The Burns family had money? What money?
My parents had a nice house, sure, but I knew for a fact there was a second mortgage on it because I’d been secretly paying it off for the past four years. Garrett worked a decent job, nothing spectacular.
There was no family fortune. So why did Franklin Whitmore think there was?
And more importantly, what exactly was their situation that needed covering? I spent the next hour watching the Whitmores like a hawk watches a field mouse.
Every smile, every handshake, every perfectly timed laugh. Now that I knew something was wrong, I could see the cracks in their performance.
Franklin kept checking his phone, his jaw tightening every time he read a message. Delilah’s jewelry was impressive, but I noticed she kept touching it nervously, like she was afraid it might disappear.
And Sloan, beautiful, perfect Sloan, had a hunger in her eyes that had nothing to do with love and everything to do with desperation. I started piecing things together.
The Whitmores thought my family had money, but why? Then it hit me.
For the past four years, I had been sending money to my parents anonymously through my company, Birch Hospitality. Every month, a payment would arrive to cover the mortgage, the utility bills, and the medical expenses when my father had his knee surgery.
I never put my name on it. I didn’t want their gratitude or their questions; I just wanted to help from a distance.
But my parents didn’t know it was me, and apparently my mother had decided it must be Garrett. Of course she did.
In her mind, her golden child was secretly taking care of them, being the responsible, successful son she always knew he was. I could practically hear her bragging to her friends about how generous Garrett was, how he always looked after his family.
The money I sent, the sacrifices I made, and Garrett got the credit. The irony was so thick it could have walked into the party and ordered its own drink.
So the Whitmores did their research. They saw a nice house with no visible mortgage payments.
They heard Patricia bragging about her son’s investments. They saw a family that appeared to have hidden wealth, and they targeted Garrett like sharks smelling blood in the water.
But here’s the problem with their plan: the money wasn’t Garrett’s. There was no family fortune.
The Whitmores were chasing a mirage. And when they found out the truth, my family would be left with nothing but the fallout unless someone stopped it.
The Investigation Begins
I found Wesley Crane near the service entrance, clipboard in hand, overseeing the catering staff. He looked up when I approached, his professional mask slipping into genuine warmth when he saw it was me.
He quietly asked if everything was all right, calling me “Ms. burns” Before I shot him a look, he corrected himself and just called me “Bethany”
I told him I needed a favor. I needed background information on the Whitmore family, anything he could find: business records, news articles, whatever was out there.
Wesley didn’t ask why; that’s what I appreciated about him. He simply nodded and said “he’d see what he could dig up”
He disappeared with his phone already in hand. I went back to the party trying to act normal, which was getting harder by the minute.
That’s when Sloan found me. She appeared beside me like a designer-dressed ghost, her smile so sweet it could give you cavities.
She suggested we should chat, just the two of us, to get to know each other. She put her hand on my arm like we were old friends.
I let her guide me toward a quiet corner near the restrooms. The moment we were out of earshot of the other guests, her smile vanished like it had never existed.
She told me she knew about me. She said she knew I sent money home every month, playing the good daughter from a distance.
But here’s what confused her. She said “Why would someone who could barely afford their own apartment send money to family that didn’t even like them”
I felt my jaw tighten but kept my expression neutral. She continued.
Unless, she said, I was trying to buy their love, trying to prove I was worth something. Pathetic, really, she told me.
She leaned closer and said I should know that Garrett told her everything. How I was always jealous of him, how I couldn’t handle not being the favorite, how the family only tolerated me out of pity.
She smiled again, but this time it was sharp and cruel. She said she was going to marry Garrett, become part of this family, and honestly she thought it would be better for everyone if I just stayed away.
She said nobody would miss me. She called me “dead weight” Then she patted my arm like she was comforting a child and walked away.
I stood there for a moment processing what had just happened. Sloan thought I was broke.
She thought the money came from Garrett. She had no idea who I actually was.
It was like watching someone brag about how amazing their rental car is to the person who owns the entire dealership. Honestly, if arrogance burned calories, Sloan Whitmore would be invisible.
