The invitation came through our family group chat, my mother’s perfectly worded message dripping with concerned disappointment. Emergency family meeting. Thursday, 7 p.m.
Alexandra needs our help with her situation. My situation. That’s what they’d been calling my decision to quit my prestigious consulting job and start my own company.
Two years of subtle jabs, worried phone calls, and not-so-subtle hints about real jobs with actual benefits. I sat in my car outside my parents’ colonial-style house, the same one I’d grown up in, where success was measured in Ivy League degrees and corporate titles. My sister Emma’s Range Rover sat in the circular driveway next to Dad’s Mercedes and Mom’s BMW.
My Toyota Corolla looked decidedly out of place. Exactly how they saw me these days. My phone buzzed.
A message from Marcus, my CFO. Forbes article goes live at 8:00 p.m. Eastern.
You ready for this? Perfect timing. Family intervention starts at 7.
His response was immediate. Savage. Want me to send a car to rescue you?
No need. Some things are worth waiting for. I checked my reflection in the rearview mirror.
No designer clothes tonight. Just a simple black blazer over a white shirt. Minimal makeup.
Hair pulled back neatly. Let them think I couldn’t afford better. It made the coming revelation sweeter.
The door opened before I could knock. Mom stood there in her Chanel suit, perfect makeup not quite hiding her frown lines. “Alexandra, darling, you’re late by two minutes.”
“Details matter in business, dear.” She ushered me inside.
“Something you might want to consider.”
The living room was set up like a corporate intervention. Dad in his power position by the fireplace. Emma and her husband James on the leather sofa.
Mom’s sister, Aunt Patricia, in the wingback chair. They’d even called in reinforcements. “Ally.” Emma air-kissed my cheek.
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