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đ At my fatherâs 80th birthday celebration, he divided 39 million dollars among my brothersâyachts, villas, company shares. He raised his glass in front of the entire family and said, âYou have never deserved anything.â Everyone clapped and burst out laughing. But as I quietly left, an old lawyer handed me a letter my mother had left 30 years earlier, and it changed my life.
I was standing under a chandelier at a fiveâstar hotel in downtown Boston, watching waiters in black tie glide past with silver trays, when my father decided to turn my entire life into entertainment.
Heâd rented out the biggest ballroom, parked two new luxury cars out front for people to admire, and flown in half of New Englandâs old money. My brothers were in tuxedos that probably cost more than my entire wardrobe. I was in a navy dress Iâd bought with a faculty discount during a sale in Cambridge, the same one I wore to graduations at the college where I teach literature.
âTonight,â my father announced, his voice booming across the Four Seasons ballroom, âI celebrate the two children who understood legacy.â
He pulled Alexander and Victor to his side like trophies. On the screen behind him, photos flashed by: the Blackwood headquarters downtown, the summer house on Marthaâs Vineyard, a gleaming white yacht cutting through water off the coast of Maine.
âIâm dividing my estate,â he said. âApproximately thirtyânine million dollars in properties, yachts, company shares, and cash⌠between these two.â
The room erupted in applause. My brothers grinned, their wives already calculating which house theyâd remodel first. I stood near the back, fingers tight around my champagne flute, my daughter Melissaâs hand resting on my arm like an anchor.
âItâs okay, Mom,â she whispered. âWe knew this was coming.â
I thought so tooâuntil my father raised his glass again.
âAnd then,â he said, his voice shifting, âthereâs Catherine.â
Every head turned. The Boston skyline glittered through the floorâtoâceiling windows behind him, but I swear I could feel every eye burning into my plain navy dress.
âMy firstborn,â he went on, smiling in that way that never reached his eyes. âThe one who chose poetry instead of profit, lecture halls instead of boardrooms. The daughter who never understood the first thing about success.â
He looked straight at me.
âCatherine, you never deserved anything from this family. And that is exactly what you will receive.â
The silence broke into laughterânervous at first, then louder as Alexander and Victor chuckled, giving everyone else permission to join in. Crystal glasses clinked. Someone actually whistled.
I set my glass down before my hand betrayed me and shattered it.
âMelissa, Iâm leaving,â I murmured.
âIâll come with youââ
âNo. Finish the cake. Someone should get something out of this circus.â
I walked out of that Boston ballroom with my spine straighter than it had been in years. The October air on Boylston Street was sharp and cold, cutting through the heavy perfume and expensive cologne. Valets jogged back and forth with keys to German cars. My tenâyearâold Toyota looked almost embarrassed between a Bentley and a Tesla.
âProfessor Blackwood?â
The voice came from the shadows near the edge of the parking lot. An older man stepped forward, his coat collar turned up against the wind. For a second, I thought I was imagining thingsâhe looked like a ghost from another life.
âIâm Thomas Edwards,â he said. âYour motherâs attorney. We met a long time ago. You probably remember me from the house in Cambridge. And from the funeral.â
I did. Not clearly, but enough.
He glanced back at the hotel entrance, where the music had already started again.
âIâve been waiting thirty years for this night,â he said quietly. âYour mother made me promise.â
From inside his coat, he took out a thick, yellowed envelope. My name was written across the front in my motherâs looping, unmistakable handwriting, the ink faded but still intact.
âShe told me to give you this if your father ever did in public what he just did upstairs,â he said. âIf he ever tried to take not just your share, but your dignity.â
My fingers shook as I took it.
In the front seat of my car, under the dim glow of the parking garage lights, I broke the old wax seal. The faintest trace of her perfume rose up like sheâd just left the room. The first line of her letter made my heart stop. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All Comments đ¨ď¸
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