She told me she had known about the LLC. Dad had come to her three months before he died, after his diagnosis, and asked if he should protect me.

She had told him yes.

“Why didn’t you say anything earlier?” I asked.

“Because it wasn’t my secret,” she replied. “And I wanted to see if your mother would do the right thing on her own.”

“She didn’t.”

“No,” Grandma said softly. “She didn’t. But you did.”

Then she cupped my face.

“You stood your ground without destroying anyone. That matters.”

She nodded toward the conference room.

“Go home, sweetheart. I’ll deal with the rest.”

Marcus caught up to me in the parking lot.

The expensive suit was wrinkled now. The confidence was gone.

“I know you’re angry,” he said. “You should be.”

I didn’t turn.

“Then explain.”

He came around in front of me, and for the first time in years, I saw him not as the favored son but as a broken man.

Dark circles under his eyes. Shaking hands. The hollow look of someone who had been running from himself for too long.

“I kept thinking I could win it back,” he said, voice cracking. “One more game, one more bet, and then it would all be fixed. But it never got fixed. And now I don’t know how to get out.”