The Bugatti came later—a bright dividing line. After we completed a complicated acquisition, an investor invited me to a luxury car showcase. I went for the complimentary champagne and found myself standing before a pearl-white Bugatti Mistral, remembering the car magazines Dad used to bring home. Buying it felt reckless and absolutely right. My hand trembled as I signed the papers, then I drove off in a machine that sounded like authority.

Through it all, I remained no-contact.

The occasional text that slipped through—“Hey, can you help us out just this once?”—was erased without response. Therapy gave me words for what had happened: parentification, financial abuse, scapegoating. It also granted me permission not to step back into the flames.

Then an email from Mr. Greene, our former landlord, appeared in my inbox. He was retiring and intended to sell the house. “Thought you might want first refusal,” he wrote. “You were always the responsible one.”