When the session ended, I walked out to the gravel drive. My ride was not a limousine. It was a dusty three-year-old Ford F-150. In the passenger seat, tail thumping against the door, was Tripod—a golden retriever I had pulled from a kill shelter. He was missing his back left leg, but he had the kind of smile that could light up a blackout.
I climbed in, scratched behind his ears, and asked, “Ready to go home, buddy?”
We drove away from the ocean and inland toward a small cabin tucked into the woods of upstate New York. It was tiny compared to the estate, but it possessed something the estate never had.
Warmth.
When I turned into the dirt drive, smoke was curling from the stone chimney. A man stood on the porch chopping wood.
Mark paused mid-swing and wiped sweat from his forehead. He was not a billionaire heir. He was a former Army combat medic—the man who had patched shrapnel wounds in my side in the Kandahar Valley, the only man who had ever seen me cry in the dirt and never once mistaken it for weakness.
When I stepped out of the truck, he didn’t ask about stock prices or board votes.
He asked if I was hungry.