Uncle Edgar stepped forward, hands up as if he could physically calm the moment. “Now, Dad, we were just—” he began, switching into his fake reasonable voice. “We were just teaching Nolan a lesson. That’s all. No harm meant.”
Aunt Miriam’s voice trembled. “Uncle Everett, I only went along with the others. I didn’t want to upset anyone.”
Uncle Clyde nodded desperately. “Yeah, sir, we thought it was a joke. We didn’t realize—”
Grandpa’s face didn’t soften. Not even a little.
He looked at my father first—Victor, the oldest son, the one who always acted like the family name was his personal property. Then he swept his gaze to Warren and Edgar, and finally to Trent.
“You mocked Nolan,” Grandpa said, voice low and cold, “because he drives a truck.”
My father puffed up, defensive. “I don’t look down on him,” he lied, in the same breath he’d used to insult me. “But he’s thirty-two and still driving trucks. I was trying to motivate him to do better.”
Grandpa’s eyes narrowed.
“Victor,” he said, “aren’t you ashamed of yourself?”
My father’s cheeks flushed. “Why should I be?”
Grandpa waited a beat, like he wanted the silence to make room for the truth.
Then he said the sentence that cracked the room open.
“Because twelve years ago, when you went bankrupt, Nolan—only eighteen—gave up college and became a truck driver so you wouldn’t drown. He didn’t want to be a burden on you. And what did you do? Even while you were broke, you poured every last cent into Trent.”