Eventually, my father apologized with tears in his eyes. He admitted that choosing Jake over me had been the biggest mistake of his life and asked whether there was any way we could become a family again. The words were sincere, but they couldn’t erase years of rejection.
I forgave them because carrying anger would only hurt me. Forgiveness, however, didn’t mean pretending the past never happened. I made it clear that the inheritance they once expected me to surrender would never become their safety net.
Instead, I offered my father a maintenance position managing several of my properties. If he truly wanted a second chance, he could earn it through honesty and hard work. Without hesitation, he accepted, grateful simply to have an opportunity.
Sometimes I think back to the frightened eighteen-year-old girl sleeping in her car with nothing except a Stanford acceptance letter folded inside her backpack. She believed she’d lost everything. In reality, she was only a few steps away from discovering that the greatest gift her grandmother left behind wasn’t two million dollars—it was the chance to build a life that no one could ever take away