My Brother Tried To Sell My Beachfront Complex For Fast Cash-kieutrinh

The first text arrived while I was sitting across from people who could change the next five years of my company.

My phone buzzed beside my notebook at 9:17 on a Tuesday morning.

The sound was small, but in that glass conference room, it felt sharp.

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The air-conditioning was set too low.

The water glasses on the table had little rings of condensation under them, and the city outside looked clean and expensive through the windows.

Mr. Yamamoto had just asked me about our Q4 revenue targets for the Singapore expansion.

I had an answer ready.

Then Tyler’s name lit up my phone.

I should have ignored it.

Most of my life with my brother had taught me that whatever Tyler wanted could usually wait until he finished turning it into an emergency for everyone else.

But the phone buzzed again.

Then again.

I glanced down just long enough to read the first message.

“Found a buyer for that old beach house of yours.”

I did not move.

The second message arrived immediately.

“Getting $200,000. You’re welcome.”

Then the third one followed.

“Sold your beach shack for quick cash. You never use it anyway.”

For one strange second, the conference room went quiet in my head.

Nobody else had seen the messages.

The investors were still looking at spreadsheets.

My assistant was still near the glass wall with her tablet tucked against her chest.

Someone’s pen clicked twice.

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