They gave me the worst room on the family trip.
They didn’t know I owned the hotel.
I decided to keep quiet and observe the annual family reunion.
It was a tradition my mother insisted on maintaining, though for me it always meant a weekend of constant comparisons and cutting remarks.
This year would be no different—except that the luxurious hotel where we would stay was now my property, thanks to the inheritance my grandfather had secretly left me six months earlier.
When I arrived at the lobby of Hotel Miramar, my heart was beating fast.
I watched as my sister Lucia, the family favorite, was welcomed with hugs and smiles by everyone.
No one noticed my presence until my mother saw me and frowned.
“I thought you wouldn’t come, Carmen,” she said, not bothering to hide her disappointment.
“I wouldn’t miss our family reunion for anything in the world,” I replied with a smile that didn’t reach my eyes.
My brother-in-law Roberto—Lucia’s husband—looked me up and down, evaluating my outfit as always.
“Seems like the graphic design business isn’t so lucrative after all,” he commented with a mocking smile.
If only they knew.
My small company was now a respected agency with international clients, but I never bothered to correct their assumptions.
What hurt me most was the secret I kept.
This five-star hotel, with its impeccable gardens and ocean view, now belonged to me.
Grandfather had always seen something in me that the rest of the family ignored.
“We distributed the rooms,” my mother announced as Manager Miguel handed out the keys.
My sister and her husband received the presidential suite with ocean view.
My parents got an executive suite.
My cousins received deluxe rooms.
And me.
“Carmen, you’ll stay in room 108 on the first floor,” my mother said.
“The room next to the laundry.”
“The smallest and noisiest room in the hotel.”
Everyone exchanged glances—some with shame, others with poorly disguised amusement.
Miguel, the manager, seemed uncomfortable.
“Ma’am, we could look for another option for the young lady,” he began.
But my mother interrupted.
“It’s not necessary. Carmen is simple. She doesn’t need luxuries.”
I saw how Miguel looked at me with concern.
He knew who I really was.
But we had agreed to keep my position as owner secret during this family reunion.
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