To the house I owned, in the car I paid for, with their son dressed in the gown I’d purchased, having just experienced the most humiliating day of their lives. And I slept through the whole thing. Sunday morning arrived cold and clear.
I woke at six o’clock, made coffee in the old percolator Nadine had bought at a garage sale thirty years ago, and poured myself a bowl of oatmeal.
Set my phone on the kitchen table and turned it back on. The notifications came flooding in—twenty-two missed calls, eighteen voicemails, thirty-seven text messages.
I took a sip of coffee, let it cool my throat, then hit play on the voicemails. Colin’s voice came first, from Saturday around 6:30 PM: “You selfish old bastard.
Do you have any idea what you just did?
My investors were there. Important people. People I’ve been cultivating for months.
You’ve destroyed everything we built.
Everything! Call me back right now.”
I took another bite of oatmeal.
Next message. Jillian, her voice thick with tears: “Daddy, please pick up.
People are laughing at us.
Everyone saw. They watched us get kicked out. Please call back.
We can fix this.
We can explain to people. Please, Daddy.”
Colin again, angrier now: “This isn’t over.
You can’t just humiliate us like this and think there won’t be consequences. You’re going to regret—”
Jillian again: “Daddy, I’m begging you.
Colin’s business partners won’t return his calls.
They think we’re broke. They think we lied to them. Please, we need your help.”
I listened to all twenty-two messages while finishing my oatmeal and moving on to my second cup of coffee.
The messages progressed from angry to desperate to resigned.
The last one was Jillian at midnight, just crying. No words, just sobs.
When they finished, I sat there for a moment looking out the kitchen window at Nadine’s rose garden, now overgrown but still producing blooms every summer. Then I deleted every single voicemail.
Selected all, delete, confirm.
Gone. I rinsed my bowl, poured a third cup of coffee, and went to sit on the back porch. It was Sunday morning.
I had nowhere to be.
Nothing to do except enjoy the quiet. My phone rang around 10:30.
I let it go to voicemail. It rang again at 11:15.
Again at noon.
I didn’t answer any of them. Just sat on that porch watching birds in Nadine’s garden, drinking coffee, feeling something close to peace for the first time since yesterday morning. Around 1:00 PM, I heard a car pull into my driveway.
Loud, angry doors slamming.
Heavy footsteps on my walkway. Then pounding on my front door—not knocking, pounding, the kind that rattles the frame and announces fury before you even open it.
I set down my coffee, walked slowly through the house, and looked through the peephole. Colin and Jillian stood on my porch looking like they’d been through a war.
Colin’s expensive suit was wrinkled, his shirt collar open and stained with what might have been wine.
His hair stuck up in every direction. Jillian still wore that cream dress from yesterday, now with a visible tear in the hem. Her makeup was smeared down her face in black streaks.
I took my time unlocking the door.
Let them wait an extra moment while I disengaged the deadbolt and turned the handle. When I opened the door, Colin didn’t wait for an invitation.
He pushed past me into my living room like he owned the place. “What the hell were you thinking?” His voice came out raw and ragged, hoarse from either yelling or drinking or both.
“Do you have any idea what you just did?
Those were my investors! People I’ve spent months cultivating! And you made me look like a broke fraud in front of all of them!”
I closed the door carefully, turned to face him, and crossed my arms.
“I know exactly what I did.”
“You humiliated us!” He was pacing now, hands in fists, his whole body radiating rage.
“Kenneth Brady is going to sue us for the venue costs! My investors won’t return my calls!
People are posting about it on social media—do you understand that? Videos of us getting kicked out!
You’ve destroyed my reputation!”
“Your reputation,” I repeated slowly.
“Not your character or your integrity. Just your reputation. The image you’d carefully built of being successful and wealthy.”
“What the hell is that supposed to mean?”
“It means you’ve been living off my money while pretending it’s yours.
And yesterday your house of cards collapsed.”
Jillian stepped forward, tears flowing again.
“Daddy, people were laughing at us. My friends—they watched it all happen.
They’re never going to let me forget this.”
“Your friends,” I said, looking at her carefully. “Where were my friends yesterday, Jillian?
Oh right, I don’t know.
Because I was turned away at the door before I could see if anyone I knew was there.”
She flinched like I’d slapped her. Colin got between us, his face inches from mine. “You need to fix this.
Right now.
Call the venue, pay them, send out an apology. We can still salvage—”
“I’m not fixing anything.”
“The hell you’re not!”
“Let me explain something to you, Colin.” I kept my voice level, calm, the way you’d explain basic math to a confused child.
“That house you live in? The one in Broad Ripple with the nice porch and the two-car garage?
That’s mine.
Been mine for eight years. My name on the deed, not yours.”
Colin stopped pacing. “That was a wedding gift.
You gave that to Jillian.”
“I let you live there rent-free.
Past tense. You’ll be receiving an eviction notice Monday morning.
Thirty days to vacate.”
“You can’t do that.”
“That Lexus you drive? Six hundred eighty dollars a month, every month, coming directly out of my account.
Not anymore.
Tomorrow I’m canceling that automatic payment. You can figure out how to pay for it yourself or they can come repo it. I honestly don’t care which.”
His face was changing colors—red to white to purple.
“You’re insane.”
“That office space on Mass Ave where you meet your ‘investors’ and play financial consultant?
I own that building. Your lease is terminated effective immediately.
Locks will be changed Monday morning.”
Jillian grabbed my arm with both hands, her fingers digging in. “Dad, you can’t do this.
We have Liam.
We have a baby!”
I pulled my arm free, stepped back. “You want to treat me like I don’t exist? Like I’m just an ATM you tap when you need cash?
Fine.
Then my money doesn’t exist either. Not for you.
Not anymore.”
Colin moved fast, grabbed the front of my shirt, pulled me close. For a second I thought he might actually hit me—saw it in his eyes, that calculation of whether violence was worth the risk.
“You can’t do this,” he said again, voice low and dangerous.
“We’ll sue you. We’ll have you declared incompetent, senile. No sane person would destroy their own family like this.
We’ll take everything—the garage, the properties, all of it.
And we’ll win.”
I didn’t move, didn’t blink. Just stared at him until he let go and stepped back.
“Get out of my house.”
“We’ll destroy you,” Colin said. “I know people.
Lawyers who’ll tie you up in court for years.
By the time we’re done—”
“Get out.”
Jillian tried one more approach, softening her voice, making her eyes wide and pleading. “Dad, please. Think about Liam.
He’s your grandson.
What about him?”
That stopped me for just a moment. Long enough to feel the blade twist.
“Liam deserves better than parents who use people and discard them. Maybe losing everything will teach you two how to actually be decent human beings.
But that’s not my job anymore.
Now get out before I call the police.”
Colin grabbed Jillian’s arm, started pulling her toward the door. She was crying again, saying something I couldn’t make out through the sobs. At the threshold, Colin turned back one more time.
Got close enough that I could smell yesterday’s alcohol on his breath.
His voice came out quiet, controlled, far more frightening than the yelling had been. “You’re going to regret this, old man.
That’s a promise.”
The way he said it made my blood run cold—not angry, not desperate, but calculated. Like he was already planning something, working through the angles.
They left.







