I kept extra batteries in my glove box, legal pads in my briefcase, stain remover under my sink, and a torque wrench in the trunk. I knew how to reset a breaker, patch drywall, sweet-talk a listing agent, read a sewer scope report without flinching, and make frozen meatballs taste like an intentional dinner. I was the oldest child, the problem solver, the backup plan with a pulse.
My younger sister, Natalie, was the opposite kind of gravity. She pulled attention instead of responsibility. She moved through rooms as if apology was for people without options. If I was the one who quietly fixed the smoke detector, she was the one who burned toast and filmed herself laughing while the kitchen filled with smoke. If I had a spreadsheet, she had a story.
If I had a budget, she had a dream and someone else’s card on file. My parents never said those things out loud, not in those words, but families tell the truth long before they confess it. Ours had a pattern. Natalie made messes. I cleaned them. Natalie was “going through something.” I was “good with numbers.” Natalie was “finding herself.” I was “solid.” The translation was simple: she got latitude, I got assignments.
People who don’t work in real estate think it’s all glossy kitchens, white countertops, and smiling couples clinking champagne flutes over closing documents. That’s the brochure version. The real job is mold behind drywall, basement humidity, appraisals that come in twelve thousand low, sellers who say they “just want a fair number” and mean a fantasy number, buyers who insist a cracked foundation is “probably cosmetic,” and 11:14 p.m. texts asking whether an easement is “basically like renting from the government.”
You spend half your life in khakis and the other half pretending a car is an office. Still, I loved it. I loved the moment when someone stopped looking afraid and started looking anchored. I loved handing over keys. I loved saying welcome home and meaning it, maybe because home had always felt like a thing other people used more safely than I did.
By the time I was thirty-two, I’d built a life that made sense to me even if it looked small to people with louder priorities. I had a clean-lined modern house near a park, or at least that’s what everyone thought. I had a growing book of business, a decent reputation, a regular Friday morning coffee order, and a backyard strung with warm white lights that clicked on automatically at dusk and made the evening feel like something I’d earned.
I had clients who trusted me and a routine I could carry like scaffolding. Most nights I ate late, answered emails too long, and told myself I’d take a vacation when inventory settled down. Inventory never settled down.
The night before my trip, I walked my place the way I always did after short-term tenants checked out. Count the remotes. Check the locks. Open the fridge. Run water in the guest bath. Look under the sink. Breathe in lemon cleaner and drywall dust and that neutral smell houses have when nobody’s living emotionally inside them. The renters had left that morning.
The cleaners had finished an hour earlier. My rolling suitcase stood by the front door. My neck pillow hung from the handle like a ridiculous foam donut. Outside, the string lights flicked on over the deck and spread little gold circles across the dark yard. For a second I just stood there, hand on the kitchen island, and let myself like the view.
My mother called while I was checking the back slider.
“Text when you land,” she said. No hello, no how are you, just instruction.
“I will.”
“Don’t post too much.”
I smiled without humor. “Of the ocean?”
“You know how people get. Jealous. Nosy. Not everyone needs a front-row seat to your business.”
I locked the door and leaned against it. “I’m sitting on a plane for ten hours, Mom. My business is mostly going to be sunscreen.”
“Benjamin.”
That tone. Half reproach, half ownership. I could see the pinched little smile she got when she felt me slipping out of reach.
“I’ll be careful,” I said, because that was easier than telling the truth, which was that I wanted six whole days without being assigned a feeling.
There was a pause, then she softened the way she always did after tightening the screws. “Have fun, honey.”
“I plan to.”
“And if you talk to the bank—”
“Mom.”
“What?”
“I’m leaving at five in the morning.”
Another pause. “Fine. Later.”
We hung up. I set the phone facedown and looked around the living room. The couch was centered. The blanket throw was folded into a square. The coffee table books were stacked. Nothing in that room looked accidental. My whole adult life had become a reaction against chaos disguised as care.
I flew to Maui the next morning, and for six days my phone spent more time in airplane mode than it had in the previous six months. I slept with the balcony door cracked so I could hear the water. I learned exactly how early you had to get up to watch the sand turn from slate to silver to honey. A bartender at the hotel showed me how to cut a pineapple properly and laughed at how seriously I took his instructions.
A kid at a resort pool asked if I was famous because I wore sunglasses and walked fast. I told him no, just tired. He nodded like that made perfect sense. I read two paperback thrillers with terrible dialogue and loved them anyway. I rented a convertible one day and drove the Road to Hana with the top down and zero podcast episodes queued up because for once I didn’t want anyone’s voice in my ear, not even my own.
On day seven I turned my phone back on at breakfast, expecting the usual stack of work things. Maybe a lender question. Maybe my office manager asking where I’d put the sign riders. Maybe a client who’d decided at midnight they wanted to see the brick colonial after all. Instead the screen lit like a slot machine.
Nineteen missed calls from Mom. Twelve from Dad. Seven from Natalie.
A text from Dad: Important update about the house. Call now.
Another from Mom: We handled something for you. You need to hear the numbers.
Another from Natalie: Finally leveled the playing field. You can always crash on my couch lol.
I stared at the screen while my coffee went untouched and a cube of papaya slid off my fork and landed wetly back on the plate. A server appeared beside me with a refill pot and a bright practiced smile.
“Everything all right?”
“Yes,” I said too fast.
She poured anyway.
I didn’t call right away. I scrolled. More messages. More voicemails. The kind of repetition that announces not urgency but momentum, a group of people convincing themselves they’d done something decisive and wanting to enjoy the echo before reality interrupted.
When I finally hit call, my mother answered on the first ring.
“Well,” she said, almost breathless with satisfaction. “There you are.”
“I’m in Maui,” I said. “Why do I have thirty-eight missed calls?”
“We handled something for you.”
Something in me started to go cold.
“What did you handle?”
“Your house.”
I said nothing.
“It’s sold.”
The word hung between us. Sold. Flat, cheerful, irreversible in her mouth.
“What?”
“You’re welcome,” she said. “You’ll understand when you hear the numbers.”
My grip tightened on the phone so hard my knuckles popped. At the next table, a little boy was begging his father for more syrup. Somewhere behind me, dishes clinked. Ordinary life kept moving like my world wasn’t peeling off its frame.
“Mom,” I said slowly, “what exactly do you mean it’s sold?”
She exhaled sharply, already annoyed that I hadn’t responded with gratitude. “Benjamin, don’t be dramatic. It’s done. Natalie was underwater. We couldn’t just let her drown. There was an offer. We took it. Honestly, you should be relieved.”
I put the phone down on the tablecloth without hanging up and looked out at the water. Waves rushed in, broke, and pulled away again with mechanical calm. My mother was still talking, but her voice had become background distortion, words turning to static under the much louder noise in my head.
I picked the phone back up.
“How much?”
“Three-eighty. Cash. Less a service fee, but still very fair under the circumstances.”
“What circumstances?”
She made a tiny impatient sound. “Natalie’s debt has gotten out of control. We had to act.”
“How much debt?”
Another pause, and then she said it in the same tone someone might use to report an especially frustrating restaurant bill. “Two hundred fourteen thousand.”
I closed my eyes.
Natalie had always lived like consequences were a rude rumor. But $214,000 was not messy. That was a controlled demolition.
My mother kept talking. She said they’d paid off the worst of it. She said they’d handled several urgent creditors. She said they’d even put aside enough for me “to get back on my feet,” as if I had been the one being rescued from a fire someone else lit in a room full of gasoline.
I let her finish.
Then I said, very carefully, “Who signed the sale documents?”
“We did what was necessary.”
“Who signed them, Mom?”
Silence.
Then, “Come home and we’ll explain.”
That answer told me everything I needed to know.
I ended the call. I sat still for a full minute. Then I opened the airline app, found the earliest red-eye I could get, booked it, went upstairs, and packed with hands so steady they scared me. There’s a kind of anger that shakes you and a kind that clarifies. This was the second kind. The bright, calm, surgical kind.
While I zipped the suitcase, another text arrived from Dad.
Tough medicine, son. But it’s family. You’ll thank us.
That was the moment I smiled.
Not because anything about it was funny. Because the house they thought they sold wasn’t what they thought it was.
To understand why that mattered, you have to understand where I came from and what my family heard when they looked at me.
We grew up in a low ranch-style house in Willow Creek, North Carolina, a suburb made of dogwood trees, good school zones, and neighbors who always knew too much about whose son got into Wake Forest and whose daughter started wearing diamond studs with no visible fiancé. My mother, Diane Hart, ran the house the way some women run pageants, as a system of ratings disguised as nurture. She kept a literal rainy-day jar on top of the refrigerator, a giant glass thing full of rolled bills and change, and she kept a scoreboard in her head that was even more exact.If I got straight A’s, she nodded and said, “That’s what we expect from Benjamin.”
If Natalie brought home a C-plus after weeks of missing assignments, my mother clapped like somebody had just won a marathon. “Huge improvement,” she’d say. “See what happens when she applies herself?”
If I drove Natalie to tutoring, dance, nail appointments, the mall, football games, or parties where I sat outside with a sweating cup of soda while she took selfies under string lights, that was just me “being a good brother.” If I asked for gas money, Dad would tell me to “invest in myself.” If Natalie wanted a new phone because the camera on hers “didn’t hit the same,” Mom would say she needed to feel connected.
Our father, Carl, worked in regional sales for a plumbing supply distributor, which meant he spent most of his life in polos embroidered with a logo and came home convinced he understood people because he understood leverage. He wasn’t loud in the obvious way. He preferred the slower, smugger version of control. He’d sit at the table with one ankle on a knee, listening to a problem he had no intention of solving until the exact moment he could turn it into a lecture. He loved phrases like tough love, real world, sink or swim. He liked feeling like the only adult in the room, even when the room contained actual adults.
Natalie was six years younger than me and beautiful in the exhausting way that lets a person confuse admiration with exemption. By fourteen she already knew how to turn vulnerability on and off like a lamp. By eighteen she had three kinds of laughter, each calibrated for a different audience. She wasn’t evil. That would have been simpler. She was just expertly protected from consequences and highly gifted at turning need into theater.
At nineteen, I started as an assistant to a real estate agent named Jared Wilkes, a man who wore loafers with tiny anchors stitched on them and never took off his wedding ring even at the gym. Jared taught me more than licensing ever did. He taught me to tell whether a roof was nearing the end of its life from the curb. He taught me that buyers didn’t just need information, they needed permission to admit what they were afraid of. He taught me to arrive early and leave after the clients because half the business was letting people feel held in the scariest purchase of their lives. I made copies, put up signs, cleaned out lockboxes, scheduled inspections, learned the difference between septic optimism and septic denial, and ate more drive-through breakfast sandwiches than any cardiologist would recommend.
I passed the licensing exam on the second try at twenty-one and cried alone in my car for ten quiet minutes after seeing my score. Not big sobs. Just relief. The kind that leaves salt tracks and a headache.
My first year on my own was brutal. Ten showings for one offer. Two offers for one contract. One contract for one month where I could breathe without checking the bank app every morning like a weather report. I wore the same blue suit until the elbows went shiny. I bought coffee for buyers I couldn’t afford to lose and learned how to smile through an FHA appraisal delay like it wasn’t ruining my life. Once an older couple hugged me at closing and said, “We couldn’t have done this without you,” and I believed them enough to keep going through a season when my dinner was usually rice, eggs, and whatever sauce packet I could find.
During all of that, Natalie drifted through identities like she was browsing outfits in a store dressing room. Cosmetology school for six months. Then an idea about becoming a lifestyle influencer. Then consulting for a friend’s boutique. Then social media management, which appeared to involve posting stories from coffee shops and describing that as a brand strategy session. My mother called it exploring her gifts. My father called it entrepreneurial instinct. I called it expensive.
Credit found her quickly.
By twenty-six, she had a leased SUV, four store cards, a personal loan, two maxed-out “starter” cards, and a habit of posting champagne glasses with captions about “manifesting abundance.” The minimum payments climbed like vines. Every conversation in my parents’ house bent toward her eventually. Just until next month. She’s under pressure. It’s a phase. We can’t let her drown. She’s got potential.
Meanwhile, I was the one with a plan. Benjamin will figure it out. Benjamin’s good with numbers. Benjamin doesn’t make emotional decisions. Benjamin is steady.
What they heard in all of that was permission.
What I heard was a warning.
When the market shifted two years earlier and a developer I worked with got overextended on a sleek new build near Dorchester Park, I saw the opening that changed everything. The house was gorgeous in that controlled, modern way buyers either loved instantly or dismissed as cold: wide white oak floors, black-trimmed windows, a waterfall island, floor-to-ceiling sliders opening onto a deck, and just enough landscaping to look curated without looking fussy. Investors had backed out. Rates had spooked the higher-end buyers. The developer was sweating. I knew his lender, knew the carrying costs, knew the timeline, knew the smell of panic when it started to seep through optimistic emails.
Jared’s voice came back to me from years earlier: Control the asset, control the outcome.
So I did.
I formed a tiny LLC called Willow Pine Holdings. Three hundred bucks online, an operating agreement so boring it could have put caffeine to sleep, a business checking account, and a registered agent address that had nothing to do with my parents or my personal mail. Willow Pine took a master lease on the property with an option to purchase at a set price inside a specific window. I paid first and last month plus security from savings and bridged the rest with income from furnished rentals to traveling nurses, corporate relocations, and one family whose kitchen had exploded during a remodel and who cried when I showed them a pantry bigger than their old powder room.
The cash flow worked. The option mattered more. I could buy when financing lined up, or assign if the market jumped. The point wasn’t hiding. The point was control. I’ve been in real estate long enough to know that casual ownership becomes family folklore fast. Once people think your name is on a thing, they start talking about it like inheritance, leverage, emergency collateral, community resource, or “just for a little while.” My name was nowhere obvious. The mailbox plate read WPH LLC. The lease didn’t say Benjamin Hart. The deed didn’t say Benjamin Hart. The scanned documents lived in an encrypted folder labeled taxes because no one in my family had ever clicked on anything labeled taxes voluntarily in their lives.
I told my parents I was staying there sometimes because explaining beneficial interest and option consideration to them sounded like a punishment I hadn’t earned.
The night before Maui, Natalie came by while I was swapping out a dead bulb over the back porch. She did a slow lap through the kitchen and living room like she was evaluating a hotel.
“This place is very you,” she said.
I stayed on the ladder. “Organized?”
“A little boring.”
“It’s a rental.”
She laughed and leaned on the island. “You always downplay. Who goes to Maui alone, by the way?”
“Me.”
“Lame.”
“Thank you.”
She popped a piece of gum into her mouth, chewed twice, then said, “Can you Venmo me six hundred? It’s for a business thing. I’ll send it back Tuesday.”
“No.”
She blinked. “Wow. That was immediate.”
“Because the answer is immediate.”
“It’s six hundred dollars.”
“It’s never six hundred dollars.”
She looked at me for a beat, deciding whether charm would work better than offense. Offense won.
“Must be nice to hoard.”
I got down from the ladder, screwed the dead bulb into my palm, and looked at her. “Stop asking.”
Her eyes narrowed. “You don’t have to be so weird about money.”
I almost laughed. Natalie only called money weird when it belonged to someone else.
After she left, I opened the notes app on my phone and typed three lines.
No more loans.
No more rescue.
No more discussing it.
I underlined the last one.
Four days into Maui she posted a story from some rooftop bar in Charlotte holding a glass with a sugared rim and the caption big life moves. I swiped past it. Whatever was happening on her side of the family circus, I didn’t want a ticket.
Then my parents sold what they thought was my house.
I pieced together the details later from texts, bank records, one badly drafted contract, and several people who should have been smarter than they were. Here’s the version that held up.
Natalie’s debt had reached $214,000. Not all at once, and not in ways my parents fully understood. A car note at $642 a month. Multiple cards with balances in the high teens. Personal loans. A financing plan for a laughably expensive “women in wealth” course that charged almost twenty percent interest. Back rent on an apartment she insisted she couldn’t leave because “the building had networking potential.” Medical bills she’d ignored because opening the envelopes “spiked her anxiety.” Missed payments folded into new lines of credit until everything was a snake eating its own tail.
My parents panicked the way people panic when they’ve mistaken denial for strategy and the math finally speaks louder than hope.
My mother found a cash buyer through a woman at church whose nephew “did distressed deals.” The buyer met them at a diner off Capital Boulevard. Shaved head. Golf shirt. Overconfident eyes. The type who uses first names too fast and says things like we can get creative here when what he means is I am about to do something barely legal and I’m hoping your desperation will flatter me.
Mom brought a Zillow printout of the property. Dad brought his confidence. Natalie brought her phone and the assumption she should negotiate a finder’s fee if she ever pointed him toward another “off-market opportunity.”
The buyer asked, “Can we do this without the owner present?”
My mother said, “He’s traveling, but it’s his house. We’re family. He asked us to handle it.”
A lie so smooth it offended me even secondhand.
There was talk of a quick deed, immediate wire, back taxes the buyer would “generously absorb” even though there were no back taxes, and a seller’s affidavit that looked like it had been printed from a legal forms website held together by ads and bad intentions.
Mom signed my name in shaky block letters.
Dad witnessed.
Natalie filmed a boomerang of some cheap plastic champagne flutes clinking over hash browns and a ketchup bottle.
The wire hit my parents’ joint account the next afternoon. Three hundred eighty thousand dollars less a nonsense service fee that functioned, I assume, as the buyer’s toll for preying on amateurs.
They used $214,000 to extinguish Natalie’s debt. They paid off their SUV. They covered some back taxes of their own. They floated the idea of a “family reset trip.” They left a little aside for me as if they’d just arranged a scholarship.
The astonishing part was not the greed. That was old. The astonishing part was the confidence. They really thought they had authority over anything attached to my life just because they understood the outline of it.
I landed in Raleigh hollow-eyed and too awake. The airport smelled like coffee, floor polish, and stale recycled air. I got my bag, skipped the rental line because I’d left my car in long-term parking, and drove straight from the airport to the property without going home or stopping for coffee or calling anyone. The sky was pale and hard. Traffic on 40 moved like a bad mood.
When I turned onto the street, a moving truck sat half-crooked in the driveway.
My mother stood in the yard in church sandals, a linen blouse, and the expression of a woman directing a fundraiser setup she fully expected praise for. She spotted me, lifted one hand, and smiled with bright irritation.
“There he is,” she called. “We were wondering if you’d make it before they started demo.”
I parked on the street and got out.
“Miss what?” I asked.
“The handoff.”
The front door was propped open with a paint can. Inside, the house smelled like Windex and warm drywall. My father was in the entryway with his hands in his pockets, casual as a man inspecting his own handiwork. Natalie emerged from the kitchen wearing an oversized sweatshirt that said blessed in cursive, her hair up, her face scrubbed clean in a way she used whenever she wanted to look like a misunderstood child instead of a thirty-something adult disaster. The buyer stood in front of the fireplace taking photos on his phone like he was already drafting the listing for a flip.
He looked up, gave me a quick nod, and then looked back down. He had no idea who I was. Not really.
“Everyone inside,” I said.
Something in my voice must have registered, because they followed without argument. That happened often when I stopped sounding like their son and started sounding like someone who signed documents for a living.
We settled in the living room. My mother crossed her ankles and folded her hands like a parish mediator. Dad stayed standing. Natalie leaned against the island. The buyer hovered with one foot in retreat.
Mom began with the tone of someone resuming a reasonable conversation that someone else had unfortunately interrupted. “We made a tough call, Benjamin, but family comes first.”
I took a breath.
“You sold a house that doesn’t belong to you.”
Silence.
My mother’s smile twitched. “Don’t be childish.”
“It’s your house,” Natalie said. “Everyone knows that.”
“No,” I said. “It’s a property controlled by Willow Pine Holdings LLC under a master lease with a recorded option to purchase. My name is not on the title. My name is not on the lease. The deed you signed is worthless.”
The buyer stopped pretending to scroll.
Natalie snorted. “Oh my God, Ben. Nobody cares about your little paperwork game.”
I turned to her. “Did you use the wire to pay off your debt?”
Her chin lifted. “That’s none of your business.”
“If you accepted proceeds from a fraudulent conveyance, it’s very much my business.”
Dad stepped forward. “Watch your tone.”
I looked at him. “No.”
The word hit the room harder than I expected. My father blinked like I had spoken in static.
Mom tried a different approach, softening her voice. “Benjamin, honey, we saved your credit. We got you out from under that mortgage.”
“There was no mortgage.”
She faltered.
“There was an option. There was rental income. There were bookings through October that you canceled in a group text, like you were rearranging brunch.”
Now the buyer really was listening.
I looked at him. “You should call your attorney before you attempt to record anything.”
He straightened. “Look, I was told—”
“You were told a family member had authority to sell an asset they do not own. If you cloud title on this parcel, I will come after you, your company, and any carrier stupid enough to insure you.”
His face changed in real time from smug investor interest to quick internal math. This was no longer a cheap flip. This was exposure.
“This sounds like a family issue,” he said.
“No,” I said. “It’s a fraud issue.”
My mother shot back, “We did what had to be done. Natalie was drowning.”
Natalie folded her arms. “I’m not apologizing for not wanting my life destroyed.”
I let my hands rest on my knees so they wouldn’t shake. “I didn’t ask for an apology.”
Dad scoffed. “Of course not. You came here for a speech.”
I stood up.
“No,” I said. “I came here to set a boundary.”
Mom laughed once, sharp and disbelieving. “Boundary? Don’t start with therapy words.”
“Call it whatever makes you comfortable. Here’s what’s happening. I’ve already notified the developer and the title company. I will file an affidavit of fraud and a notice of interest before noon. The wire will be returned, or a judge will help us find it. Either way, you used my identity where it did not belong. That is forgery. That is identity theft. I’m not calling the police today because I’m not trying to put my mother in a mug shot, but do not confuse restraint with confusion. I understand exactly what you did.”

Mom stared at me. “Done with what?”
“Being your rainy-day jar,” I said. “Being your plan. Being the person you take from and then call selfish when he notices.”
Natalie rolled her eyes. “Oh please. You hoard money and call it discipline.”
“I call it rent paid on time. I call it taxes filed. I call it not stealing.”
Her face flushed.
Dad pointed toward the door. “You can get out of our family if you’re going to talk like that.”
I almost smiled. “I already did.”
That line landed and left a ringing silence behind it.
The buyer muttered something about taking a call and slipped outside. A minute later I watched him from the window pacing near the truck, phone to his ear, every ounce of confidence leaking out through the soles of his golf shoes.
My mother spoke again, but quieter now. “We were trying to help.”
“No,” I said. “You were trying to erase the difference between mine and available.”
Nobody answered that because there was nothing honest to say.
I left them sitting there in a house they did not own, in a transaction that no longer belonged to them, and drove to my office with the kind of focus that strips the world down to essentials. Traffic lights. Brake lights. Recorder’s office. Title company. Draft the letter. Preserve the records. Move before they start improvising.
My paralegal friend Shea met me in my office ten minutes after I called. Shea was technically in-house for another brokerage downtown, but she had the soul of a crisis librarian and a legal pad in her tote bag at all times. We had been friends since my second year in the business, back when she saved me from filing a repair addendum with a signature page missing and then made me buy her tacos as payment for my future survival.
She sat down, uncapped a pen, and said, “Start at the beginning. Dates, numbers, names. Don’t interpret. Just tell me.”
So I did.
Maui. The calls. The wire amount. The diner. The forged signature. The buyer. The property structure. The option. The bookings. The canceled reservations. The stunned investor in my living room pretending not to hear the word fraud.
She asked fast, precise questions while I pulled documents from the encrypted folder, the fireproof box, my email, and the banking portal. Lease. Option agreement. LLC formation docs. Permit paperwork. Utility records. Booking calendar. The buyer’s contract when it finally hit my inbox because someone had been foolish enough to forward it to my father’s AOL account and he had been foolish enough to send it to me with the subject line see what you’re risking.
The contract looked like it had been drafted by a man who once overheard a real estate podcast and mistook that for legal education. Names misspelled. Blank lines filled in with different inks. An address typo. Consideration language vague enough to make a law student cry.
Shea highlighted hard enough to leave dents in the page.
“Good,” she said.
“Good?”
“Not for them. For us.”
By noon we filed three things. A notice of fraud with the county. A notice of interest asserting the LLC’s position and option rights. A cease-and-desist letter to the buyer and his company. Then a preservation letter to my parents, drafted in the blandest language possible because bland language scares guilty people more than yelling does. No threats. No drama. Just keep all texts, emails, bank records, videos, contracts, and related communications regarding the unauthorized attempted conveyance of the property at issue.
Boring is powerful in real estate.
The buyer blinked first.
He called that night from a number I didn’t know. I answered on speaker while Shea sat across from me eating almonds out of a bag and making notes with her eyebrows.
“Benjamin?” the buyer said. “This is Curtis.”
The shaved-head opportunist. Now suddenly human.
“Yes.”
“Look, there seems to have been a misunderstanding.”
“No,” I said. “There seems to have been a fraudulent transfer.”
He inhaled through his teeth. “We were operating on representations from your family.”
“You were operating on greed.”
Silence.
Then, “My attorney says the cleanest thing would be to unwind.”
“That is an excellent legal instinct.”
“I can wire the funds back.”
“You should.”
“And then we call it even?”…………….