Jessica announced to the entire family that my beach house was being foreclosed on and bragged that she was about to buy it for pennies on the dollar. Her entire scheme collapsed when the Vice President of the bank called to ask who she was, confirming that the owner had already paid the full $1.2 million balance ahead of schedule.
The notification sound from the “Morrison Family Reunion” group chat echoed through my office like a warning siren. I didn’t even need to read the message to know Jessica was behind it.
For the last six months, my cousin had been spreading stories that my architectural firm was failing and that I was buried in debt.
She seemed obsessed with watching me lose the one thing our grandfather had left solely to me: a breathtaking glass beach house in Malibu. In Jessica’s mind, because she was the “golden” grandchild who married into a wealthy real estate family, the house should have belonged to her.
“THE BANK FINALLY REPOSSESSED YOUR BEACH HOUSE,” the message read in huge capital letters, followed by champagne emojis. “My husband’s contacts confirmed it.
The foreclosure auction is Monday, and I’m buying it for only $400k. At last, the house will be back in responsible hands. Sorry, Maya, but luxury isn’t meant for everyone.”
My relatives piled on with fake sympathy disguised as insults, while my father—who always trusted Jessica because she presented herself as some financial genius—responded almost immediately.
“I won’t let our family property go to outsiders.
Jessica, I just wired you $200k to help cover the bid. Make sure the house stays in the family.”
I stared at the screen in disbelief.
I had never missed a mortgage payment. In reality, for the past three years I had been funneling nearly every dollar of profit from my company into a high-yield offset account.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
