I was late for the most important meeting of my life to finally meet my fiancé’s reclusive, notoriously difficult billionaire father. On my way, I stopped to give my only lunch and my expensive cashmere scarf to a shivering homeless man on a park bench. When I finally walked, flustered and late, into the grand dining room of the mansion, I froze. The same homeless I had just helped was sitting at the head of the table.
The invitation, when it came, was not an invitation at all. It was a summons. It arrived via an email from a law firm, its tone as cold and impersonal as a court order. Mr. Arthur Sterling requests the presence of his son, Mr. David Sterling, and his companion, Ms. Ava Peters, for a formal dinner at his private residence.
It was the meeting David had been hoping for and dreading for the entire two years we had been together. David’s father was a ghost, a legend in the financial world. He had built a multi-billion dollar empire from nothing, and then, a decade ago, had vanished from public life completely, retreating into the seclusion of his vast walled estate.
He was, by all accounts, a brilliant, eccentric, and incredibly difficult man. He had disowned his own older son, David’s brother, for marrying a woman he deemed unsuitable. And now, it was my turn to be judged.
The week leading up to the dinner was a masterclass in anxiety. David, usually so calm and confident, was a nervous wreck. Ava, you don’t understand.
This isn’t a normal meet the parents. My father doesn’t do normal. This is a test.
Everything with him is a test. My entire future. Our entire future.
Our wedding. Everything. It all depends on him approving of you.
He had given me a list of rules. A conversational mind field to navigate. Don’t talk about your job at the non-profit.
He thinks charity is a weakness. Don’t mention your parents’ humble background. Stick to safe topics.
Art. History. Economics.
Wear the navy blue dress I bought you and the cashmere scarf. He values appearances. And for the love of God, he had said, his eyes wide with a desperate, pleading fear.
Do not be late. He believes tardiness is a sign of a disordered mind. I spent the morning of the dinner feeling like I was preparing for an audition rather than meeting a future relative.
I rehearsed my safe topics in the mirror. I pressed the dress and the until they were perfect. My stomach was a tight, churning knot of nerves.
I was so focused on not failing this ridiculous, arbitrary test that I almost forgot to be a human being. I decided to take the train to his town, a wealthy, secluded enclave an hour outside the city. David was already there, having gone ahead to prepare.
The plan was for me to take a taxi from the station to the estate. But as I stepped off the train, the sheer, overwhelming pressure of the day made me feel like I couldn’t breathe. The station was about a mile from his estate.
I decided to walk, just to clear my head, to feel the solid ground beneath my feet. The walk was like a journey into another world. The streets were quiet, lined with impossibly large mansions, hidden behind towering hedges and ornate iron gates.
I felt like an intruder, a simple girl from a world of pavement and concrete, trespassing in a land of privilege. I checked my watch. I was cutting it close, but I still had 20 minutes.
It was on a small, beautifully manicured green that bordered the road that I saw him. He was sitting on a park bench, and he was the only thing in this entire perfect town that looked out of place. He was an elderly man, his clothes disheveled and worn, his face etched with deep, tired lines of a hard life.
He was shivering in the cool afternoon air, his thin jacket no match for the breeze. He looked lost, hungry, and completely, utterly alone. My first instinct, the one conditioned by a week of my fiancé’s panicked instructions, was to walk past.
Don’t get involved. Don’t be late. Don’t show up looking anything less than perfect.
But then I looked at his face, at the quiet, profound sadness in his eyes, and my grandmother’s voice echoed in my head from a long time ago. The measure of your character, my dear, is how you treat someone who can do nothing for you. To hell with the test.