On the morning my grandfather’s will was read in downtown Cleveland, my parents arrived looking like they had rehearsed every expression in advance. My mother, Melissa Carter, pressed a tissue to eyes that never actually watered. My father, Daniel, sat straight-backed in an expensive dark suit, wearing the same controlled, respectable face he used whenever he wanted strangers to think he was the calmest person in the room. My brother Ryan barely glanced at me. That, at least, felt familiar. In our family, I had always been easiest to tolerate when I said nothing and stayed out of sight.
My grandfather, Charles Whitmore, had been different. To the rest of Ohio, he was a wealthy businessman who had turned Whitmore Industrial Holdings from a small supply operation into a regional manufacturing and logistics empire. To me, he was the only person in the family who treated me like my thoughts mattered. He called on Sundays, remembered details, and stepped in quietly when my parents would not help with tuition or rent. He once told me, “The people who underestimate you are usually counting on you never getting a real chance.”
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