“My family is paying for this life, and they don’t want a blue-collar man with a cheap truck ruining the photos,” she snapped back.

“You are right,” Wesley had agreed. “I will tell him to stay away because we don’t need his help anymore and it is time to cut ties.”

I had left their house that night without a word and immediately contacted my attorney, Franklin Rigby, to begin the paperwork. I realized then that my sacrifices were being viewed as a ladder to be kicked away once the climb was finished.

The files Wesley received were five notarized documents that carried the full weight of the law. The first was a complete revocation of my will which had previously left him an estate worth millions in property and savings.

The second document was a formal demand for the restitution of all personal loans I had granted him over the last six years. I included a detailed ledger of tuition payments and business capital backed by his own messages promising repayment.

The third file was a notice of withdrawal of my guarantees on his mortgage and his luxury car loan. Without my backing, the bank would immediately trigger a massive interest rate hike or demand the full balance.