Your father’s voice cuts through the airport like a public verdict—loud, deliberate, meant for an audience. If you refuse to give your first-class seat to your sister, he threatens to “beat that attitude out of you” in front of everyone. You stand there exhausted, still running on fumes from work and travel, while Daniela watches with quiet expectation. Around you, strangers slow down, sensing something ugly unfolding in real time.
You don’t speak at first because you’re calculating, not backing down. The upgrade, the booking, the entire trip—it’s all under your name. Every flight, every hotel night, every reservation your family has been celebrating online belongs to you financially. You chose one thing for yourself after years of giving everything away: a seat where you could finally rest.
When the airline agent confirms your Delta One upgrade, the shift in the atmosphere is immediate. Daniela reacts first, offended that something wasn’t automatically hers. Your mother tightens her grip on your arm, demanding you fix it. Your father doesn’t ask—he escalates. The slap comes fast, sharp, and public, snapping your head sideways as the terminal goes completely silent.
In that silence, something inside you stops bending. You look at them—not shocked anymore, just clear. Then you tell the gate agent to cancel every ticket you paid for-