The air left the room. I felt the foundations of my twenty-two years shift and groan. I looked at the man who had scrubbed floors and bartended until dawn to buy me sneakers. I looked at the man who had practiced braiding hair and who had never once, in two decades, said a disparaging word about the woman who had left us.
Then, she pulled out a second set of documents.
“All that’s left is for you to sign,” she said, sliding a stapled contract onto the porch railing. She clicked a silver pen and held it out to me.
I looked down at the paper. I was a businessman; I knew how to read the fine print. And there it was, in Paragraph Three: a claim for a substantial share of LaunchPad. She wasn’t here to reclaim a son. She was here to claim a stakeholder’s position in a multimillion-dollar company. She had heard the news, seen the valuation, and decided that my success was a debt I owed her for the simple act of birth.
She wasn’t a ghost seeking redemption. She was a creditor seeking a payout.
Chapter 5: The Market Value of a Mother
The silence that followed her request was not peaceful; it was a pressurized, ringing void, the kind that precedes a massive structural collapse. I looked at the silver pen she held out—a sleek, cold instrument that felt like a weapon. Then I looked at the contract. It was heavy with legal jargon, the kind of “boilerplate” language designed to sound official while it quietly hollowed out everything you’ve built.
She wasn’t even blinking. She stood there on our porch—the porch my father had repainted three times with his own tired hands—and waited for me to hand over a piece of my soul as if it were a common courtesy.
“You’re mine, Dylan,” she repeated, her voice dropping into a lower, more intimate register that made my skin crawl. “Think of everything we can do. With my guidance and your vision… we’re a powerhouse. We can leave this house, this town. We can finally be the family you were meant to have.”