Barry stamped it.
“And the wire transfer?” my father asked, his voice trembling slightly. “Initiated?”
“Initiated,” Henderson said, tapping on his tablet. “$850,000. Should hit your account momentarily.”
I held my breath. I stared at my phone screen in the woods.
Two minutes passed. Small talk. Laughter.
Then my father’s phone dinged. He looked at it. A massive grin broke across his face.
“Received,” he said. “We are closed.”
My phone buzzed.
It was a text from Silas.
Morgan, the bank alert just triggered. The money is in. The deed is recorded electronically. It is done.
The crime is complete.
I stood up. My legs were stiff, but my resolve was iron.
“Time to go to a party,” I whispered.
I hiked back to my car. I drove it onto the main road and turned into my driveway. I didn’t slow down. I drove right up to the front porch, blocking the developer’s SUV.
Gravel crunched loudly under my tires.
I slammed the car door and marched up the steps. I could hear them inside—cheers.
I walked through the open front door.
The scene froze.
My father was holding a plastic cup of champagne halfway to his mouth. My mother was laughing at something Paige said. The developers were smiling. Barry Miller was putting his stamp back in his bag.
“Get out of my house,” I said.
My voice wasn’t loud, but it cut through the room like a knife.
My mother dropped her cup. Champagne splashed onto the hardwood floor.
“Morgan,” she gasped. “You—you’re in Maine.”
“Surprise,” I said.
I looked at the developers.
“Who are you people?”
“I’m Mr. Henderson,” the man said, stepping forward, looking annoyed. “The owner of this property, and you are trespassing.”
“You don’t own anything,” I said. “And you—” I pointed a shaking finger at my father. “—are a thief.”
My father’s face went from shock to a deep, violent purple.
“What are you doing here?” he hissed.
“I live here,” I said. “Did you forget?”
“We have a contract,” Henderson shouted, waving a piece of paper. “Signed by your father, who holds your power of attorney.”
“I never signed a power of attorney,” I said, looking Henderson in the eye. “My father forged my signature. And that man—” I pointed at Barry “—is a disbarred paralegal with an expired stamp.”
Barry looked like he was going to vomit. He grabbed his bag and started inching toward the door.
“That’s a lie!” Conrad roared. “She’s lying. She’s mentally unstable.”
“Show me the proof, Dad,” I challenged him. “Show me the email where I agreed. Show me the text.”
“You agreed verbally!” he screamed. “On the phone!”
“I have cameras,” I said calmly. “I have microphones. I have you on video breaking into my house three nights ago. I have you on audio planning the forgery.”
The color drained from Henderson’s face. He looked at my father.
“Is that true?”
“No. Of course not,” Conrad yelled. He was panic-stricken now. The walls were closing in.
He marched over to me, towering over me.
“You ungrateful little— You are ruining everything. I did this for the family, for your mother, for Paige.”
“You did it for your gambling debt,” I said. “$150,000 to Silver State Holdings in Vegas, due December 31st.”
That was the breaking point.
Conrad lunged. He didn’t think. He just reacted.
He swung his open hand and connected with my cheek.
The sound echoed in the empty room. The force of the blow knocked me back into the doorframe. My head snapped to the side. My lip split instantly, warm blood filling my mouth.
“I am your father!” he screamed, his eyes bulging. “You obey me. You do as you are told.”
Silence.
Absolute, terrified silence.
My mother covered her mouth. Paige looked away. The developers looked horrified. Henderson took a step back, realizing he was in the middle of a domestic violence crime scene.
I slowly turned my head back to look at him. I touched my lip. I looked at the blood on my fingers.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t scream.
I smiled. A cold, broken smile.
“You just assaulted me,” I whispered. “Thank you.”
“Get out!” he screamed, shoving me toward the door. “Get out before I kill you!”
“I’m leaving,” I said. “But you’re the one who’s going to lose everything.”
I walked out. I got in my car. I backed down the driveway.
As I drove away, I saw Henderson shouting at my father. I saw my mother sinking into a chair, sobbing.
It was over.
I drove back to the motel. I sat on the edge of the bed holding an ice pack to my cheek. My hand was shaking so hard I could barely hold the phone.
I dialed Silas.
“Did you hear it?” I asked.
“I heard it,” Silas said. His voice was shaking with rage. “I was on the open line. I recorded everything. The confession, the assault. Are you okay?”
“I’m fine,” I said. “My lip is cut. But I’m fine.”
“I’m calling the police right now,” Silas said.
“No,” I said. “Wait. Send the emails first.”
“Morgan—”
“Send them,” I said. “Burn it down.”
“Okay,” Silas said. “Sending now.”
Email one to the sheriff’s department. Subject: Report of assault, forgery, and grand larceny. Attachments: Video of the break-in. Audio of the forgery planning. Audio of the assault.
Email two to Apex Coastal Developers’ legal team. Subject: Notice of void title and conservation easement. Attachments: The affidavit of forgery, proof of Barry Miller’s disbarment, and the official U.S. Fish and Wildlife designation proving the land was a protected habitat.
Email three to the bank. Subject: Fraud alert.
“It’s done,” Silas said. “The bomb is dropped.”
I hung up. I turned off my phone. I laid back on the bed and closed my eyes.
I slept for 14 hours.
It was the sleep of the dead.
When I woke up on Saturday morning, the sun was shining. It felt mocking. I turned on my phone. It vibrated continuously for five minutes.
52 missed calls. 87 text messages.
I scrolled through them, watching the timeline of destruction.
Friday, 3:30 p.m. Paige: Dad is freaking out. Henderson is threatening to sue. Fix this, Morgan.
Friday, 4:00 p.m. Mom: Morgan, please pick up. Dad is having chest pains. The bank froze the account.
Friday, 5:00 p.m. Dad: You ungrateful brat. Call Henderson. Tell him it was a mistake. Tell him you gave verbal permission. Do it now.
Friday, 6:00 p.m. Dad: I will kill you if you don’t fix this.
Then the tone shifted.
Friday, 7:30 p.m. Mom: There are police cars in the driveway. Morgan, what did you do?
Friday, 8:00 p.m. Paige: They are arresting Dad. They put him in handcuffs. They are taking him away.
Friday, 8:15 p.m. Mom. Voicemail.
I listened to it. She was hysterical.
“Morgan, they took him. They say it’s a felony. They say he stole the money. Please, baby, tell them we’re family. Tell them not to take him.”
Then a text from Henderson’s lawyer to my email: We are rescinding the contract immediately. We are suing your father for fraud and misrepresentation. We will be seeking maximum damages.
I sat there drinking a stale coffee. I typed one message. I sent it to the group chat with Mom, Dad, and Paige.
You sold my trust for $850,000. You forged my name. You hit me in the face. You told me to obey. Now you pay the bill. Enjoy prison.
Then I blocked them.
All of them.
The fallout was nuclear.
Because Silas had sent the conservation easement document to Henderson, Apex realized immediately that they had been duped. Even if the sale had been legal, the land was worthless to them. They couldn’t build their lodge.
They sued my parents for fraud, breach of contract, and damages. They wanted their $850,000 back, plus legal fees.
But the money was gone. The bank had frozen it, but the loan sharks in Vegas had already put a lien on my parents’ assets.
The house in Seattle—the one my parents lived in—was foreclosed on. They lost their cars. They lost their country club status. They lost their friends.
My father was charged with wire fraud, first-degree forgery, and assault. Because the amount was over a certain limit, the feds took the case. He took a plea deal to avoid a 10-year sentence. He got three years in federal prison.
My mother was charged as an accomplice, but she pleaded ignorance. She got five years of probation and community service, but she was destitute. She had to move into a state-subsidized efficiency apartment.
Paige—the bank of Dad was closed forever. She had to get a job as a waitress to pay rent in a shared apartment. She tried to blast me on social media, but the internet sleuths found the court records. They saw the video

