My dad sat beside her, nodding slowly like the money was already sitting safely in his account.
The last time they had looked that confident, I was sixteen and they were walking out of our small rental near the shores of Lake Superior in a quiet town called Harbor Point, leaving behind an empty refrigerator, a dead phone, and a short note that basically said I would figure things out on my own.
I did figure it out, just not in the way they ever imagined.
My name is Avery Collins, and when my parents left me hungry and alone at sixteen, the only person who showed up was my uncle, a man they always dismissed as distant and obsessed with work.
He took me in without hesitation, pushed me harder than anyone ever had, and helped me build a life where every bill was paid because I earned it myself.
Years later, that life was the reason I was sitting in a conference room in downtown Denver, staring at the two people who had abandoned me, now pretending they had raised me with care and sacrifice.
My mom smiled at the lawyer with that polished expression she used when she wanted something.
“We’re family, right,” she said. “Let’s not make this complicated.”
But it was already complicated long before that moment.
The lawyer cleared his throat, turned to the final pages, and began reading a section of the will my parents did not even know existed.
Their smiles stiffened before he finished the first sentence, and I could see confusion slowly turning into something sharper and more desperate.
They thought they had walked into easy money, but they had no idea my uncle had prepared for exactly this situation.
What he wrote there did not just take away their expectations, it destroyed any chance they had of taking anything from me.
Before my parents left, our life in Harbor Point looked normal from the outside, with neighbors who waved from their porches and summer evenings filled with the sound of kids riding bikes along cracked sidewalks.
Inside our house, things were already breaking down in ways no one else could see.
My dad, Gregory Collins, was supposed to work at a local repair garage, but most weekends he disappeared to a nearby casino and came home smelling like beer and frustration.
My mom, Diane, slowly stopped showing up to her job at a grocery store and spent her days on the couch scrolling through her phone or watching reality shows, barely noticing when I came or went.