My father stormed into the resort lobby with Beatrice trailing behind him, furious that I had cut off their luxury privileges. I calmly opened the billing report in front of the board members and legal team, exposing nearly three hundred thousand dollars in unauthorized charges hidden under company accounts. Paige and Sloane tried blaming me, but I reminded them my grandfather built the business by protecting workers—not exploiting them. Then I slid a folder toward my father and gave him one choice: repay everything quietly or face investigators. When Beatrice whispered, “You wouldn’t,” I looked directly at her and said, “You just told me I wasn’t family.”
By sunset, they were gone. Beatrice cried outside the resort while Paige threatened staff and Sloane screamed that I was jealous. My father said almost nothing. That silence followed him for weeks as the board forced repayment through the sale of his cars and vacation property. Afterward, I ended every family privilege at Sterling Properties—including my own. No more free villas, no secret upgrades, no unpaid favors. Employees called it the first fair policy they’d seen in years.
Weeks later, my father asked to meet alone. He admitted he had finally read my grandfather Arthur’s final letter, the one warning him never to forget the company was built by workers, not entitled owners. Then he looked at me with tears in his eyes and whispered, “I forgot you too.” Part of me wanted that confession to fix everything. But some damage doesn’t disappear just because someone finally admits the truth.
Months later, during the employee awards dinner beneath glowing string lights, I handed the first Arthur Sterling Service Award to Rosa Delgado, a housekeeper who had devoted thirty-one years to the resort. Afterward, Nina gave me a small brass plaque discovered during renovations: Juliet Sterling — Future Boss. I cried holding it. For years, Beatrice made me feel unwanted in beautiful places. But that night I finally understood something important: beautiful places belong to the people who protect them, not the people who use them.