They Asked For $75,000—Then The Laptop Camera Revealed Who Heard Their Demand-yumihong

At 9:31 a.m., my father’s phone lit up on the glass coffee table.

Elina.

Her name glowed beside the cream wedding binder like a warning label. My mother’s hand still rested on the satin ribbon. My father’s fingers hovered over his phone, but he did not pick it up right away. He was looking at the tiny green dot above my laptop screen.

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The camera light.

The apartment went still around it.

The refrigerator hummed. My coffee sat untouched on the counter. Outside, traffic moved somewhere below my third-floor window, tires whispering against damp Denver pavement. Inside, my father’s throat worked once, then stopped.

“Who is on that call?” he asked.

His voice was quiet now.

Not soft.

Careful.

That was the first honest sound he had made all morning.

My mother turned her head slowly toward the laptop. The pearl earring on her left ear trembled against her jaw.

I did not answer him right away. I clicked once, and the spreadsheet disappeared. Under it, the video call window filled the screen.

Three people were there.

My financial attorney, Mara Levin, sitting in her home office with reading glasses low on her nose.

My accountant, Dennis Cho, wearing the same navy sweater he wore every tax season.

And my father’s older sister, Aunt Ruth, who had not spoken to him in eight years.

My mother made a small sound, almost too thin to count as breathing.

Aunt Ruth leaned closer to her camera.

“So,” she said, “you came to collect from the daughter you abandoned financially.”

My father’s face hardened so quickly it looked practiced.

“Ruth, this is not your business.”

Aunt Ruth did not blink. “It became my business when your daughter sent me the tuition receipts last month.”

My mother’s hand left the binder.

The satin ribbon curled back into place.

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