I drove back to Dallas. I didn’t sleep. I spent the night in my office above the garage—the one my family had never visited, never asked to see—surrounded by the evidence of everything I’d built.
“I’m the one who’s been subsidizing your expansion,” I said. “I bought that building because the previous owner was elderly and needed to sell quickly. I gave you below-market rent because you’re my parents. You’ve been paying $6,000 a month when market rate would be $9,500. That’s a $42,000 annual discount. And you’ve been late on that below-market rent for three months while planning to humiliate me on camera.”
“Yes, you did,” I interrupted. “You meant every word. You think I’m a failure because I didn’t become a doctor or a lawyer. You think working with my hands makes me less than. You think my business is a joke.”
Lena: I don’t think anyone knows. Your dad’s been keeping it quiet. Probably why they were so desperate to shift assets to Ryan in the will. They’re trying to protect what they can before it all collapses.
That changed things. Not completely. But enough to make me think differently about what came next.
I introduced them to my team. To Marcus, my lead mechanic, who’d been with me since day one and could diagnose a problem by sound alone. To Jennifer, who’d left a corporate job to learn the trade because she was tired of being ripped off by dishonest shops. To David, a kid from a rough neighborhood who was working his way through community college while learning skills that would support him for life. To Sam, a retired veteran who’d found purpose again under the hood of a car.
I showed them the customer reviews. The thank-you notes. The repeat business that came from treating people fairly.
“And Mom? You’re three months behind on rent. That’s $18,000 you owe me. Merry Christmas.”
“I won’t just be a mechanic,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady. “I’m going to build a business. I have a plan—”







