“Sir,” one of them said, voice steady, “we need to talk.”
David turned in a slow circle, taking them in. Their uniforms. Their expressions. Their defiance.
“You,” he said, pointing at Luis. “You’re on my payroll. All of you are. Do you have any idea what you’re doing?”
“Trying to keep our jobs,” another worker said. “And our lives. And our conscience.”
Outside, faint at first, sirens cried in the distance—Miami police, real and undeniable. Not private security. Not paid muscle. Law, or at least the closest thing to it.
I had done more than plan in the last few weeks. I had filed emergency motions through the one lawyer my parents had trusted completely and David had foolishly overlooked. I’d sent statements. I’d given the DA’s office enough hints and half-proofs to make them curious. I’d filed a report at the station from a quiet back room with a detective whose eyes had stayed locked on my bruised ribs and steady voice the entire time.
Attempted murder is a serious phrase in any state. In Florida, it has a way of making people sit up straighter. Especially when it comes from a woman whose brother just snapped up billions in assets and claimed she was out of the country.
Now, the sirens were almost here.
David’s eyes flicked toward the sound. Panic finally cracked through his carefully constructed mask.
“You think this will save you?” he spat, rounding on me. “You think dragging cops into a family matter will fix what’s broken? You think you’ll walk away from this with your precious estate intact?”
“This stopped being a family matter the second you tried to throw me off the face of it,” I replied.
He surged forward, but two of the workers stepped in his path. They didn’t touch him. They didn’t need to. Their presence alone was enough.
Moments later, the corridor filled with uniforms. Real ones. Dark blue, badges glinting under the lights. Officers moved in a controlled rush—some toward us, some toward the security rooms, some toward stairwells and exits.
“David Collins?” one of them called.
David lifted his chin, regaining a sliver of arrogance. “That’s me.”
“Turn around. Hands behind your back.”
“On what grounds?” he demanded. “Do you have any idea who I—”
“Attempted murder,” the officer cut in. “Fraud. We can talk about the rest downtown.”
The handcuffs clicked around his wrists, cold and final. For a second, as they led him away, his gaze locked on mine. There was no brother in that look. No regret. Just raw, naked hatred.
“You think this is over,” he said.
I didn’t bother answering.
Because I knew it wasn’t over. Not yet. The legal system in this country loved a spectacle almost as much as morning TV shows did. There would be hearings. Motions. Appeals. Statements. Probably more headlines. Billionaire Brother Behind Bars. Heir vs. Heir. Miami Mega-Estate at Center of Family Feud.
But as the police SUV’s door shut on him outside, as the blue and red lights reflected off the estate’s glass and steel, I felt something inside me loosen that had been clenched since the day I stood at my parents’ graves.
I stepped out onto the same balcony where he had tried to kill me. The breeze rolled in from the Atlantic, soft and salty. The estate sprawled beneath me—towers, villas, shopping wings, roads, cranes. My parents’ dream turned nearly into a crime scene by their own son.
Michael came to stand beside me. He’d arrived while the police were swarming, moving easily through the workers, nodding to the faces that had helped.
“It’s over,” he said quietly. “He won’t touch this place. He won’t touch you.”
“Not like that, no,” I said. “But his lawyers will. His stories will. His version will.”
Michael shrugged. “Then we tell ours louder.”
My phone buzzed. A message from the authorities lit up the screen, confirming what I already knew in my bones: David had been booked, charges formally filed—attempted murder, fraud, financial manipulation, endangering lives. Investigations were opening into the crash that had killed my parents, into the documents that had never been signed, into every deal he had made since their deaths.
Justice in America was slow, flawed, noisy. But for the first time, it was moving in my direction.
I inhaled deeply, letting the Florida air fill my bruised lungs. I thought about my parents—the way my mother’s eyes used to soften when she looked at the half-finished model of the estate on our penthouse dining table, the way my father used to tap the tiny plastic towers and say, “One day, this will all be yours to protect, Mary.”
Protect. Not exploit.
That was what David had never understood.
People would talk about this story for a while. It had everything American tabloids loved: money, betrayal, near-death, the glitter of a billion-dollar development, the shadow of a man in handcuffs. I could almost hear the talk-show hosts in New York and LA teasing the segment. “Coming up next, the Miami heiress whose brother allegedly pushed her off a tower…”
But beneath all the headlines, beneath the dramatized retellings and the simplified narratives, a quieter truth would hum.
A sister had refused to stay dead.
I turned away from the edge of the balcony and walked back into the tower that would soon, legally and publicly, bear my name. The pain was still there. In my ribs. In my memories. In the space where my trust in my brother used to live. It would be there for a long time.
But I was alive. I was stronger than he had thought. And I was no longer afraid.
The Collins Estate would stand not as the monument David wanted—one more shiny toy in his quest for power—but as a reminder that betrayal doesn’t get the final word. That truth, even when it falls from a great height, has a way of landing where it can still rise again.
And David, in whatever prison cell he ended up in, would have all the time in the world to understand the lesson he’d tried so hard to avoid.
Betrayal always comes back to its owner.
And now, when I say, “Now I own everything,” I don’t just mean the land, the towers, the contracts, the assets the American journalists like to list when they introduce me on financial shows. I mean I own the story. The whole story. The fall. The survival. The justice.
And no matter how many times my brother had tried to write me out of it, I am still here, telling it myself.
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