Chapter 2: Secrets Hidden Behind Gratitude
Chapter 2: Secrets Hidden Behind Gratitude
The explosion came exactly as Daniel expected.
Margaret stood first.
"You would throw your own mother onto the street?"
"I'm asking adults to support themselves."
His brother scoffed.
"You owe this family."
Daniel looked directly into his eyes.
"No."
"I loved this family."
"There is a difference."
Emily tugged gently on his sleeve.
"Please..."
"They have nowhere else."
Daniel turned toward her.
"They had somewhere."
"They chose comfort."
"They chose you."
"They chose convenience."
"But they never chose kindness."
His aunt suddenly burst into tears.
"We sacrificed everything raising you!"
Daniel quietly opened another folder.
"I know."
Everyone froze.
Inside were dozens of old photographs.
Hospital records.
Employment contracts.
Letters.
Margaret's face slowly turned pale.
Emily watched silently.
Daniel spoke almost gently.
"When Dad died..."
"I was sixteen."
"You received nearly two million dollars in life insurance."
Margaret's breathing became uneven.
"You told me we were bankrupt."
Daniel placed another document beside it.
"The money was never gone."
"It bought vacation homes."
"Luxury cars."
"Investment properties."
His brother's face turned white.
Margaret whispered,
"Where did you get those?"
"From Dad's attorney."
Another silence.
Daniel continued.
"I worked nights."
"I skipped college."
"I built my company."
"I believed I was saving my family."
He looked around the room.
"But I was only financing yours."
Emily reached for his hand.
Tears filled her eyes.
"You knew all this..."
"And still helped them?"
Daniel nodded.
"Because I thought someday..."
"They would become family again."
Margaret finally lowered her head.
For the first time...
She had no excuse.
Only shame.
The moving trucks arrived the next morning.
No one argued anymore.
One by one...
They packed their belongings.
The house grew quieter with every box that disappeared.
Emily watched from the window.
She felt guilty.
Daniel gently wrapped an arm around her shoulders.
May you like
"You didn't break this family."
"They did."