
(Scene: The car dealership showroom, minutes later. The mother-in-law, VICTORIA, stands arms crossed. Her son, MARK, is comfortingly holding ELENA.)
VICTORIA (Laughing coldly) Oh, please. Don’t act like a victim. You’re wearing that pin like it’s a crown, but all it does is prove you’re a fraud. Where did you even steal it from?
ELENA (Her voice trembling, but firming up) I didn’t steal it, Victoria. I inherited it. It was my grandmother’s.
VICTORIA Your grandmother? A peasant with a family heirloom from a luxury automotive line? Don’t make me laugh. You’re a gold digger, and this is just another cheap prop.
MARK Mom, stop it! Just listen to her for once.
VICTORIA I’ve listened to enough! Mark, you are the heir to the Sterling automotive empire. You need a wife who understands business, prestige, and class. Not this… this street-side pick-up.
ELENA (Wiping her eyes, she steps forward) Is that what you think this is? Prestige?
(Elena unpins the silver Cadillac crest from her white dress. It has a tiny, almost invisible latch on the back.)
ELENA You’ve spent your entire life obsessed with the surface of things, Victoria. The cars, the money, the boardrooms. But you’ve never actually looked at the history of the company you claim to represent.
VICTORIA (Narrowing her eyes) What are you talking about?
ELENA This isn’t just a pin. It’s the original insignia from the 1902 design prototype—a design created by Clara Sterling, the woman your family completely erased from history to monopolize the board.
VICTORIA (Stunned for a second, then regaining her composure) That’s… that’s a fairy tale. You’re lying.
ELENA Am I? My last name is Sterling, Victoria. I’m not a gold digger. I’m the granddaughter of the woman who actually founded this company before your husband’s father stole the patents.
(The showroom goes silent. Even the salesmen stop working.)
MARK (Looking at his mother, eyes wide) Mom? What is she talking about?
VICTORIA (Stuttering) It’s… it’s nonsense. She’s trying to manipulate you! Mark, walk away from her right now.
ELENA (Pulling a folded, yellowed document from her purse) I wasn’t going to bring this out today. I came here to tell you I was pregnant, hoping we could put the past behind us. But you made it very clear that you’d never accept me.
(She tosses the paper onto a display car’s hood. It’s a notarized legal claim and a lineage document.)

ELENA That paper proves exactly who holds the controlling shares of the original patent. You don’t own this company, Victoria. You’re just a temporary manager.
VICTORIA (Pale, stepping toward the paper) Give me that!
(Mark steps between them, picking up the document.)
MARK (Reading it, his face changing from shock to realization) This… this is authentic. Mom, this has the original wax seal of the founder’s estate. You knew about this?
VICTORIA Mark, listen to me—it’s complicated! It was for the good of the company!
ELENA (Putting a hand on her stomach) It was for the good of your ego. But that stops today. I don’t want your money. I don’t want your position. I just wanted you to see that your “prestige” was built on a lie.
MARK (Turning to his mother) You told me she was nobody. You told me she was beneath us. And all this time, you were the one living a lie.
VICTORIA (Frantically) Mark, don’t do this. We are a family!
ELENA No, Victoria. We are just people. And you, for the first time, are going to have to learn what it feels like to lose everything you thought you owned.
(Elena turns around, takes Mark’s hand, and they begin to walk toward the exit.)
VICTORIA (Screaming) If you walk out that door, you’re dead to me!
(Mark stops, looks back over his shoulder.)
MARK I think we’ve already been dead to you for a long time, Mom. At least now, we can finally be alive.

(They exit the showroom. Victoria stands alone in the middle of the expensive cars, the silence heavier than ever.)
