Megan didn’t show, of course. I hadn’t expected her to. The last I’d heard, she’d sold her Miami condo share and was trying to claw her way into another real estate project, always chasing the next dollar, never catching the point. But in a way, her absence was its own confirmation. She hadn’t won. She never would.
I pulled Dad’s ring from my pocket and slipped it onto my finger. The emerald caught the sunlight, a green spark against the blue of the lake.
“To you, Dad,” I whispered. “We won. In our way.”
The wind carried the words across the water, scattering them like seeds. I didn’t need to say more, because sometimes the sharpest revenge isn’t shouting down the people who mocked you. It’s standing taller than they ever imagined you could and letting your success answer everything they said.
And standing there with Mom’s arm linked in mine, the foundation alive behind us and the lake stretching wide and steady before me, I knew that answer would echo for the rest of my life.