Debt, Blood, And A Boat

My father chose fiberglass over flesh, and in doing so, he made the numbers louder than his apologies. I watched him calculate what he could live without, and it turned out to be me. That clarity didn’t harden me overnight; it honed me. I became fluent in the systems that quietly decide who gets saved and who gets written off. While they clung to the comfort of not knowing, I learned the cost of every choice they made, line by line, clause by clause.

When the moment came, I didn’t raise my voice. I raised the stakes. I acquired the debts they thought were safely scattered, then laid them in front of them like a mirror. It wasn’t revenge; it was arithmetic. They had chosen their balance sheet over my body. I let the math return the favor and walked away, steady, on the leg they’d refused to value.

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