Brother Mocked His Artist Sister. Then a Billionaire Walked In-olive

The crystal chandelier at Bistro Laurent made the whole room look as if it had been dipped in gold.

That was part of the restaurant’s talent.

It could make a cruel table look elegant.

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It could make a sharp sentence sound like concern.

It could make a family humiliation feel like a tradition, passed politely from one course to the next.

Natalie knew that before she ever sat down between her mother and the empty chair saved for Derek.

She had been to enough birthday lunches, anniversary dinners, and holiday brunches to know the choreography.

Her mother would smile too brightly.

Her father would complain about something expensive enough to prove he belonged there.

Jessica would offer a sweet little comment with a blade hidden under it.

Derek would wait until the table warmed up, then say the thing everyone else had been thinking.

Natalie had learned years earlier not to flinch too visibly.

She was thirty-one, old enough to know that families do not need fresh ammunition when they have an old story they enjoy telling.

In that story, Derek was the stable one.

Derek was three years older, the owner of Morrison Accounting, the collector of watches, the son who wore suits without clay under his nails.

Natalie was the one still finding herself.

Creative, but impractical.

Talented, maybe, but not in a way that made people like Derek comfortable.

The truth was messier and much more valuable.

Natalie owned the warehouse loft her family called dangerous.

She owned the kilns inside it, the loading equipment, the custom van parked outside with paint on the doors and reinforced interior racks hidden behind the panels.

She had sculptures insured for more than Derek’s entire office floor.

She had contracts in her inbox that would have made Jessica swallow her champagne the wrong way.

But she had stopped telling them things.

The first time Natalie sold a serious piece, Derek called it lucky.

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