Margaret reached for me. “Please don’t make permanent decisions while you’re grieving.”
I looked at her hands and thought about the little girl I used to be—the one who came to her parents for comfort and learned instead to give it.
Adrian had once told me something quietly.
“Your family treats you like something they can borrow.”
He had been right.
“This is the clearest I’ve ever been,” I said.
I walked toward the front door. Richard followed me, angry now.
“If you leave like this, don’t come back.”
I paused.
“I came today because I thought I still had parents,” I said softly. “I was wrong.”
Then I walked out.
The cold afternoon air hit my face as I sat in my car and finally let my hands shake.
Grief was still there.
But so was relief.
Adrian hadn’t just left me money.
He had left me protection.
In the weeks after, my parents tried everything—guilt messages, relatives calling, threats about embarrassment.
My attorneys answered every time with the same line:
All communication through counsel.
Eventually the messages stopped.
Because bullies lose interest when the doors stay closed.
On the first night I slept alone in my apartment, I placed Adrian’s wedding ring beside mine on the nightstand.
“Thank you,” I whispered.
Not for the wealth.
But for understanding my family well enough to protect me from them—so I could finally grieve without being robbed at the same time.