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Three days later, the rain had stopped, but the weather was the least important storm in town.
My phone buzzed with a text from Leo.
Dad and Chloe are screaming happy screams. They got a letter from the bank. Dad says we’re rich.
Frank would be standing in the kitchen holding the letter from First National, the one that said the mortgage had been satisfied in full. He would stare at the zero balance and instantly invent a reason it belonged to him. Maybe some payout. Maybe a bank error. Maybe justice finally finding the little guy after years of his own laziness and bad luck, because in his mind the world always owed him compensation for the effort of existing. Chloe would already be halfway to planning purchases in her head—designer bags, some oversized television, the next visible thing that let her perform status while contributing nothing to its cost.
They would mistake relief for ownership.
There was a knock at the motel door.
Mr. Henderson from First National stepped inside in a gray suit that looked painfully overdressed against the stained carpet and humming mini-fridge. He carried a leather briefcase and the expression of a man trying hard not to show how strange he found the scene.
“I did buy my own place,” I said. “I just need to evict the squatters first.”
He set the briefcase on the table and opened it. “You’re sure about this, Ethan? You used your entire deployment bonus, the disability backpay, and the injury settlement. This is everything.”
That was the truth. I wasn’t buying revenge. I was buying clarity. The mortgage had been in Frank’s name because when I first started sending money home, I had still believed in saving the family rather than exposing it. I had made payments for years, paid arrears, covered tax deficiencies, refinanced twice to stop him from losing the place outright, and each time I let him believe what men like him always want to believe: that surviving the consequences of their own choices is somehow proof of their competence. This time, I wanted the record clean.
Henderson slid the deed transfer papers across the table. “Technically, title passed at nine this morning.”
My phone buzzed again. Another text from Leo.
I stared at the screen a second, then typed back.
Pack your backpack. Favorite toys. Be ready.
Then I looked up at Henderson. “What time is the courtesy call?”
He checked his watch. “One hour.”
“Good,” I said, turning toward the door. “I’d like to be there when the world shifts.”
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