Grandpa let out a dry, almost amused chuckle.
“You are fools,” he said, and his voice had something close to satisfaction in it. “Did you forget I still own the other half of the farm?”
Their faces changed again, like someone had hit them with cold water.
“I’ll transfer the deed to Silas and Nolan in two days,” Grandpa added. “Try to challenge that in court.”
Silence.
They finally understood it wasn’t just four million they’d lost.
The remaining land was worth millions more, and Grandpa’s plan was already moving.
They had no leverage.
One by one, they left.
Some furious. Some crying. Some muttering. Some throwing looks at me like I had personally stolen something from them, as if my existence was the theft.
At the front door, my father turned back.
He looked me dead in the eye and said, voice cold enough to frost glass, “Are you happy now, Nolan? You broke this family apart.”
I didn’t answer.
I didn’t need to.
I pulled Ivy and Hazel into my arms and held them as the door closed behind my father.