I told him that I needed a job and he said that I could have come to him for help if I was that desperate.
I reminded him that he had turned me away every time I asked for help with tuition or my car.
“You said I needed to stand on my own feet,” I reminded him while he adjusted his cuff.
He told me that I was humiliating him in his own company and that I had to quit immediately.
“You are damaging my image here, and I don’t want to see you again,” he said before walking away.
I did not quit, but I simply moved to a later shift that my father would never see during his work day.
Months later, Zenith Crest finalized the deal that gave me effective control over the company he loved.
At a celebration dinner, my father raised a glass and said they were fortunate that a private investor had saved them.
I stood in the kitchen and listened to the ice melt in his glass while knowing that I was that investor.
My parents’ thirty fifth anniversary party was organized like a major society event with imported flowers and a string quartet.
My mother spent months planning the menu and selecting the wine, but no one asked if I was free that evening.