I told myself I’d withdraw, go back to the warehouse full-time, save up, and maybe finish my degree later. It hurt, but at least I wouldn’t sell out my parents’ memory. That night, I couldn’t sleep.
I kept replaying the note:
“Your father would hate that I’m doing this.”
Around 2 a.m., I finally opened my laptop and searched the janitor’s name.
He wasn’t just rich; he was famous-rich. Articles described him as a ruthless billionaire CEO who built a huge conglomerate, crushed unions, cut pensions, and made headlines for all the wrong reasons.
I found a grainy photo in an old local paper.
There were lawsuits and protests. One old magazine cover called him “The Man America Loves to Hate.”
I found a piece about a public feud with his only son, who had walked away from the family business “on moral grounds.” The son’s first name matched my father’s. So did the timeline and hometown.
Scrolling further, I found a grainy photo in an old local paper: a younger man in boat shoes and a polo, standing on a dock, laughing as a tiny girl in a life jacket dumped orange juice on his feet.
My horror at taking his money hardened into anger.
The caption mentioned his “only granddaughter.”
The girl looked like me.
I leaned back from the screen, my heart pounding. The janitor I’d known for four years—the man who mopped the floors—was my estranged grandfather. He had been in the building the whole time, watching from the edges.
My horror at taking his money hardened into anger.
I was angry that he’d watched me work myself to exhaustion while he had billions. Angry that he hadn’t spoken up sooner. Angry that he chose a check as an introduction instead of a conversation.
“Mr. Tomlinson. Or should I say… Mr. Aldridge?”
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