He Refused To Gift His Brother A Penthouse. Then His Mother Slapped Him-Quieen - Chainityai

He Refused To Gift His Brother A Penthouse. Then His Mother Slapped Him-Quieen

My mother slapped me in the middle of my brother’s wedding reception.

Not in a hallway.

Not beside the bathrooms.

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Not in some private corner where rich families hide the ugly parts and call it discretion.

She did it in the ballroom, beneath crystal chandeliers, in front of 250 guests, while champagne glasses hung in the air and the jazz band played something soft enough to make betrayal feel expensive.

The slap was not movie-loud.

It was worse.

It was clean.

A sharp crack that made the room understand what had happened before anyone’s face knew how to react.

My head turned from the force of it.

My wrist jerked.

The clasp on my Rolex gave way, and the watch skidded across the polished marble floor, flashing silver under the chandelier light until it tapped softly against the leg of the head table.

That tiny sound was somehow louder than the slap.

For one long second, nobody breathed.

My mother stood in front of me in her silver designer gown with her hand still half-raised.

Her chest was heaving.

Her eyes were wide.

Her face had the stunned fury of someone who had expected obedience and gotten a witness list instead.

All because I refused to hand over the keys to my $2.5 million penthouse as a wedding gift to my younger brother.

My name is Julian.

I am thirty-two years old.

Until that night, I still had one quiet, embarrassing piece of hope that maybe my family would eventually see me as more than a wallet with a pulse.

That hope died beside my watch on the marble.

The morning of Liam’s wedding, I woke at 5:06 a.m. in the penthouse my parents loved to describe as unnecessary.

The city was just starting to brighten behind the windows.

The rooms were quiet.

The floors were clean.

The kitchen smelled faintly of coffee and stainless steel and the lemon cleaner my housekeeper used on Fridays.

There was no mortgage.

No family money.

No second signature hiding on the deed.

I had bought that place with ten years of eighty-hour weeks, missed birthdays, red-eye flights, brutal negotiations, and a career my parents never bothered to understand.

To them, I was still the son who had abandoned the family business.

That was their preferred version because it made me look selfish and my father look betrayed.

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