ome up with the fifty-thousand-dollar
he exact moment my brother took his last breath, Holden was buying
rs wasn't a struggling founder. He was a secret billionaire heir play
of a motorcycle in a dangerous street race. Then he jumped off the
g to rush her to the hospital. Later, he forced me
my suffering was my own fault. He even demanded I
of the most powerful men in the country-a pact to protect me at all costs
pte
ther w
ospital, a final, flat note from the doctor that ended
d at 3
years, Holden Herrera, was at a dealershi
paid for. He was polishing the hood of the car, a gleaming silver be
My voice was hollow
iping the shiny metal with a soft clo
ay," he said, his tone flat. "I
ing they might pierce the thick wall of his indif
ossing the rag onto a workbench. He looked at me, his eyes empty
ou. You did
ment. No big expenses without discuss
t." The pact we made while I worked two jobs to support his "stru
sting like poison. "That's all it would have cost fo
dismissive hand. "A long shot. And he was
s twen
. "And we can't affo
believed was just down on his luck. But my mind was replaying a phone call I
lden Herrera, the sole heir to the Herrer
s high school sweetheart, Betsy Long, who was back in town. He bought it with the money from o
the dawning, horrific unders
he said flatly, his voice cold.
asked, the name feeling for
ed. He didn't b
ope, the endless excuses I made for his coldnes
as o
memory of my grandfather, Alphons Day, and a promise he' d made. A promise
as a man name
ied a small box from the hospital, containing the few things my brother
, a sleek convertible pul
r seat, a woman with blonde hair and a smug smil
. I stare
annoyance, as if I were a piece of trash on hi
hing. I just held
repeated, the words now a c
imed in, her voice like tinkling glass.
ze back to me. "What are you holding? Did you bring
den, honey, be nice. Maybe she can't handle
er hand, a gesture of affectio
sed to beg for his attention. But no
," I said, my
looked s
den," I said. "W
ouse, not looking back. I went stra
It was my bes
her voice full of worry. "After fiv
ent for a
. I was going
l, just a few days ago. My brother,
s in front of Holden, ri
ming down my face. "Just fifty thousand
at me, his face
" he
I cried. "He has his w
id, turning away. "I have a ca