So when the fire burned out, I picked up my phone, called Nate, and asked him to come get me.
My father laughed when he heard that.
“You leave this house,” he said, stepping close enough for me to smell the beer on his breath, “and you do not come back.”
I finally looked him in the eye.
Six years later, I called him and said, “Check your mailbox.”
Inside was a photo of me standing in front of his house.
The one I had just bought at auction.
That photo didn’t happen because of revenge alone. It happened because six years earlier, I made myself a promise while standing in front of that fire: if I ever had power again, I would never use it the way my father did.
Nate drove me to Columbus that same night with a backpack, forty-three dollars in cash, and the envelope from his trunk. I slept on his cousin’s couch for two weeks before the trade program started. During the day, I worked demolition for a contractor who liked hiring kids nobody else wanted. At night, I studied estimating, job-site safety, and project scheduling. I learned fast because I had no choice.