Then a text from Henderson’s lawyer to my email: We are rescinding the contract immediately. We are suing your father for fraud and misrepresentation. We will be seeking maximum damages.
I sat there drinking a stale coffee. I typed one message. I sent it to the group chat with Mom, Dad, and Paige.
You sold my trust for $850,000. You forged my name. You hit me in the face. You told me to obey. Now you pay the bill. Enjoy prison.
Then I blocked them.
All of them.
The fallout was nuclear.
Because Silas had sent the conservation easement document to Henderson, Apex realized immediately that they had been duped. Even if the sale had been legal, the land was worthless to them. They couldn’t build their lodge.
They sued my parents for fraud, breach of contract, and damages. They wanted their $850,000 back, plus legal fees.
But the money was gone. The bank had frozen it, but the loan sharks in Vegas had already put a lien on my parents’ assets.
The house in Seattle—the one my parents lived in—was foreclosed on. They lost their cars. They lost their country club status. They lost their friends.
My father was charged with wire fraud, first-degree forgery, and assault. Because the amount was over a certain limit, the feds took the case. He took a plea deal to avoid a 10-year sentence. He got three years in federal prison.
My mother was charged as an accomplice, but she pleaded ignorance. She got five years of probation and community service, but she was destitute. She had to move into a state-subsidized efficiency apartment.
Paige—the bank of Dad was closed forever. She had to get a job as a waitress to pay rent in a shared apartment. She tried to blast me on social media, but the internet sleuths found the court records. They saw the video of my father hitting me. She was shamed into silence.
Six months later, in June, I pulled into the driveway of the house on the peninsula. The moss was still on the roof. The air still smelled of salt and cedar.
I walked inside.
It was empty. My furniture was gone, lost to the dumpster, but the house stood.
I walked out onto the back porch. Liam was there. He had flown down from Maine to help me move back in. He was leaning on the railing, watching the ocean.
“It’s a fixer-upper,” he joked, looking at the empty living room.
“It’s a home,” I corrected him.
I walked up to him and took his hand. He squeezed it.
“Did you hear from him?” Liam asked. “Your dad.”
I shook my head.
“He sent a letter from prison. Blaming me, saying I ruined the family.”
“He ruined the family,” Liam said firmly. “You just survived it.”
I looked up at the North Ridge. Through my binoculars, I could see movement in the high branches of the ancient spruce trees—the marbled murrelets.
They were nesting.
They were safe.
The land was safe.
I had lost my parents. I had lost my sister. I had lost the illusion of a happy childhood. But I had saved the one thing that mattered. I had saved the sanctuary.
“Ready to start over?” Liam asked.
“Yeah,” I said, taking a deep breath of the clean, salty air. “I’m ready.”
So, that is my story. I sent my own father to prison to save my home. Some people say I went too far. Some say blood is thicker than water. But I say sometimes you have to cut off a limb to save the body.
What do you think? Did I do the right thing, or was I too harsh? Let me know in the comments below.
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