I stared at the numbers until they blurred. They’d refused me five thousand dollars to save my leg while setting fire to tens of thousands to preserve appearances. Cruel was one thing. This was something else.
“Can we protect you from this?” my lawyer asked. “Shield your assets so you’re not exposed when it collapses?”
I closed the folder. “No,” I said. “I don’t want to run from their debt.”
He raised an eyebrow. “I want to own it.”
That was the moment the plan became real. We moved quickly after that—efficiently, quietly. A company was formed, a name chosen that meant nothing and everything at the same time. No family connections, no personal identifiers. Just a clean shell.
Through the company, we approached the institutions holding my parents’ debt. Banks don’t love bad loans. They love clean books, and they’ll trade one for the other faster than most people realize. I bought their debt for less than it was worth. Not out of greed. Out of clarity.
Within forty-eight hours, I went from being the daughter they dismissed to the entity that owned their house, their loans, their fragile sense of stability.
They didn’t know. That was the hardest part. To sit with the knowledge that if I walked into their living room and told them the truth, they’d never sign what they were about to sign. They’d cry, they’d plead, they’d rewrite history.
So, I didn’t go as their daughter. I went as Opportunity. An intermediary reached out on behalf of my company. Professional, polished, British accent—my parents always trusted accents more than their own instincts.
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