I didn’t answer. I reached out and pressed the red button, terminating the call.
I immediately blocked his number.
Within an hour, the carefully curated, toxic ecosystem of the Collins family completely, violently imploded.
The family group chat, which Sophie had previously shown me was full of mocking memes about my “loser” status, descended into absolute, vicious chaos. Forty-seven people had lost their primary source of income simultaneously. Aunts, uncles, and cousins who had happily laughed at me while drinking my wine on Christmas Eve were suddenly, terrifyingly facing immediate foreclosure, eviction, and the inability to make their car payments.
The panic was absolute. But the most satisfying part was the direction of their rage.
They didn’t blame the faceless corporation. They didn’t blame me.
They blamed Claire and Martin.
The extended family realized that Claire’s decision to hand me divorce papers, and Martin’s decision to lock my daughter out in the snow, had directly provoked the CEO into nuking their entire livelihoods. They turned on their “patriarch” and “golden child” with the ferocity of starving wolves.
At exactly 11:00 AM, my desk phone rang. It was the private line.
I answered it.
“Daniel! Oh my god, Daniel, please!”
It was Claire. She was weeping hysterically, her voice thick with snot and absolute, unvarnished terror. The cold, cruel, disdainful woman who had smirked as she handed me a manila folder was completely gone.
She had just realized that she hadn’t discarded a broke handyman; she had just aggressively divorced a multi-millionaire, and in the process, she had accidentally bankrupted her entire bloodline.
“Daniel, I didn’t know!” Claire sobbed, begging through the phone. “You never told me the company was this big! You never told me you were the CEO! My whole family is ruined! My brothers are calling me, screaming that they can’t pay their mortgages! Dad is having a panic attack! Please, Daniel, you have to stop this!”
I leaned back in my leather chair, looking out at the city skyline.
“That sounds like a very serious problem for a woman who just gave herself the best Christmas gift ever,” I said smoothly, echoing Martin’s cruel words from the porch perfectly.
“I was wrong!” Claire shrieked, desperation making her voice crack. “I made a huge mistake! I was just stressed! The papers… I can rip up the divorce papers, Daniel! We can fix this! We can go to counseling! I love you! You can’t do this to us!”
“The papers are already filed with the county clerk, Claire,” I replied, my voice completely devoid of pity, anger, or hesitation. “And since the prenuptial agreement you eagerly signed eight years ago—assuming it was just protecting my ‘truck’ and ‘tools’—explicitly protects all corporate assets and holdings acquired before the marriage, you are leaving this relationship with exactly what you brought into it.”
“Daniel, no…”
“Nothing,” I clarified. “You get absolutely nothing. And my lawyers tell me you have twenty-nine days left to vacate my property. Tell your father to have a nice life.”
I hung up the phone. I didn’t wait to hear her scream.
I picked up my cell phone, navigated to the settings, and systematically, permanently blocked every single phone number, email address, and social media profile associated with any member of the Collins family.
I stood up from my desk, smoothed my tie, and walked out of my executive office. I walked past the busy cubicles of my employees—people who actually worked, who earned their paychecks, and who respected the company—and headed toward the elevator.
I was going home to have lunch with my daughter. The infection was purged. The rot was cut away. I was finally, truly free.
6. The Right Kind of Fix
One year later.
The winter snows had returned to the city, but the biting, bitter cold of the previous Christmas Eve felt like a distant, faded nightmare belonging to someone else’s life.
The Collins family had become a cautionary tale whispered about in the corporate parks and local country clubs.
Without the massive, inflated salaries artificially pumped into their bank accounts by Whitaker Home Solutions, the facade of their wealth collapsed with terrifying speed. Martin, facing the insurmountable evidence of his embezzlement and completely unable to afford a competent defense attorney, lost his sprawling suburban house to foreclosure before the criminal trial even began.
Claire, stripped of the luxury lifestyle she believed she was inherently entitled to, and receiving zero alimony due to the ironclad prenuptial agreement, was forced to move into a tiny, cramped, two-bedroom apartment with her disgraced parents.
I heard through the grapevine that she was currently working a grueling, minimum-wage retail job she absolutely despised, spending her days folding clothes for the very people she used to look down upon.
The extended family—the aunts, uncles, and cousins who had lost their jobs in the purge—never spoke to Martin or Claire again. They blamed them entirely for their ruin, leaving the core family completely, miserably isolated in their poverty, drowning in a toxic swamp of their own making.
I didn’t dwell on their misery. I was too busy building the future.
Over the last year, I had aggressively expanded Whitaker Home Solutions, opening new commercial branches in a fourth state. Without the massive financial drain of subsidizing forty-seven useless parasites, the company’s profit margins skyrocketed.
But my greatest success wasn’t in the boardroom.
It was Christmas Eve again.
I stood in the driveway of our new home—a beautiful, sprawling, mid-century modern house nestled in a quiet, heavily wooded neighborhood, far away from the superficial snobbery of Claire’s old subdivision.
The driveway was covered in a light dusting of fresh snow.
I watched as Sophie, now seventeen, laughed out loud, her breath pluming in the cold air. She was holding a sponge and a bucket of soapy soapy water, enthusiastically scrubbing the hood of a brand-new, incredibly safe, dark blue Volvo SUV.
It was her birthday and Christmas present combined.
We had spent the entire morning volunteering at a local community kitchen downtown, serving hot meals to families who had fallen on hard times. We spent the day surrounded by people who were genuinely struggling, but who possessed a profound, beautiful understanding of gratitude and grace—qualities the Collins family lacked entirely.
Sophie looked up, wiping a streak of soap suds from her forehead with the back of her gloved hand. She smiled at me, a bright, radiant, and completely unburdened expression. The quiet, anxious girl who had shivered on that porch a year ago was gone, replaced by a confident, thriving young woman.
“Thanks, Dad,” Sophie called out, patting the hood of the car. “It’s perfect.”
“You earned it, kiddo,” I smiled back, feeling a deep, profound warmth settling into my chest.
I leaned against the wooden railing of the front porch, watching her work.
My former father-in-law had looked at my scuffed boots and my calloused hands and called me a broke handyman. He assumed that because I knew how to use a wrench, I was inherently beneath him. He thought my willingness to fix things made me a servant to his vanity.
He was staggeringly, fatally ignorant.
He didn’t understand the fundamental truth of the profession he mocked. When you spend your entire life learning the intricate mechanics of how to build and fix complex, broken things, you also learn exactly, precisely how to dismantle them.
They thought they could lock my daughter out in the cold, publicly execute my dignity, and I would just quietly, subserviently sweep up the broken pieces of my life and fade away into the background.
I took a sip of hot coffee from my thermos, turning back to look at the warm, glowing windows of my beautiful, safe home.
I smiled, knowing with absolute, unshakeable certainty that the greatest, most satisfying, and most permanent repair job I had ever executed in my entire life was the day I finally tore them all down to the foundation.