My Sister Mocked My Cheap Dress At Dinner — Then Her Fiancé Recognized The Jet With My Name-QuynhTranJP

“Yes. That jet belongs to me.”

The six words dropped into the middle of the table and stayed there.

The citron candle gave a soft hiss beside the flowers. Melted ice clicked once against somebody’s glass. Adrian did not blink. Serena did. Fast. Then again, harder, like she could shut the whole moment out just by forcing her eyes closed long enough.

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“And Eastern Freight?” he asked.

His voice had gone lower, stripped of dinner-party polish.

I picked up my cloth napkin, folded it once, and laid it beside the dessert spoon my mother still hadn’t touched.

“I built the software they bought.”

Serena’s hand shot out under the table and caught my wrist. Her nails pressed through the fabric of my sleeve, cold and precise.

“Not here,” she whispered.

The pressure on my arm took me back twenty years in one second. Serena yanking me out of birthday photos because the color of my dress clashed. Serena pushing my science-fair ribbon behind a fruit bowl because her dance trophy needed the mantel. Serena smiling while she erased me, always gently enough that everyone else could call it misunderstanding.

I slid my wrist free.

“You already made it here.”

No one laughed this time.

A chair creaked. Uncle Jeff cleared his throat and stopped halfway. My mother’s mouth opened, but Adrian spoke first.

“Clarissa,” he said, “are you the Clarissa Vance from Vance Capital?”

The night air moved across the table, lifting the corner of the navy runner. White lights trembled above us. Somewhere near the fence, a server stood completely still with a tray of untouched espresso cups.

“Yes.”

Serena stood so quickly her chair legs scraped hard over stone.

“She invests a little,” she said, smiling too wide. “Adrian, honestly, don’t turn this into—”

He looked at her then. Really looked. The kind of look people save for broken glass and numbers that don’t add up.

I picked up my clutch. The old gray Honda key inside gave its familiar weight against my palm.

“I have an early flight,” I said.

My mother found her voice at last.

“Clarissa, sit down.”

I did not.

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