Ms. Leotaud
In the hills of Cascade, where the breeze carried the scent of pink immortelle and the walls were high enough to keep out the noise of the world, Samantha Leotaud learned her first and most important lesson: just because you have everything, doesn't mean you deserve it. The Leotauds were old money, the kind of Trinidadian family whose name opened doors before the hand even touched the knob. Samantha grew up in a grand house with a driveway that curved like a question mark, a pool that nobody used, and a cabinet full of silverware that was only brought out for funerals. She wanted for nothing. Yet, from the time she was a little girl with ribbons in her hair, something sat uncomfortably in her chest when she saw how the world treated her versus how it treated others. It was her grandmother, Sophia, who set her straight. One afternoon, young Samantha had thrown a tantrum because the cook had cut the crust off her sandwich wrong. Sophia dismissed the small staff, sat down at the tabl...