He Thought The Mansion Was His. His Father Had One Last Deed – eirian

My son hit me thirty times in front of his wife.

I counted every slap.

Not because I wanted to remember the number.

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Because some moments are so ugly that counting is the only way to keep yourself from becoming ugly too.

One.

Two.

Three.

By the thirtieth, my lip was split, my cheek was burning, and my mouth tasted like blood and pennies.

The chandelier over Daniel’s dining table threw warm light across the room, but nothing about that room felt warm anymore.

It smelled like grilled steak, polished wood, expensive cologne, and the coppery proof that my own son had crossed a line I could never uncross for him.

His wife, Sophia, sat on the cream couch with her legs crossed.

She did not scream.

She did not ask him to stop.

She smiled.

It was not a big smile.

It was worse than that.

It was the little smile of someone who thinks the person being humiliated has no power left.

My son believed he was teaching me a lesson.

He believed youth, money, and a mansion in Highland Park made him untouchable.

He believed the old man in the worn coat was only an old man.

That was his mistake.

My name is Arthur Vega.

I am sixty-eight years old.

I spent forty years building roads, bridges, office parks, shopping centers, and the kind of commercial structures people drive past without wondering who poured the concrete or fought the bank or made payroll during a bad year.

I had negotiated with unions.

I had sat across from bankers who smiled with their teeth and never with their eyes.

I had watched markets collapse, friends die, and young men mistake loud voices for strength.

Daniel was not the first arrogant man I had ever faced.

He was just the only one I had raised.

That was the part that made the room tilt under my feet.

It was a cold Tuesday in February when I went to his birthday dinner.

Daniel was turning thirty.

I parked my old sedan two blocks away because the circular driveway was full of rented luxury cars and shiny SUVs that looked better in photographs than they did on credit reports.

I could see the porch lights from the street.

A small American flag moved beside the front door in the winter air.

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