It was –10°C on Christmas Eve when my father locked me outside for what he called “disrespect.”
I was 17. I had disagreed with him at dinner, and that was enough. No coat, no gloves—just a thin sweater as he threw me out and locked the door.
Through the window, I watched my family open presents as if nothing had happened. Laughter, wrapping paper, my mother smiling… my father calm, like I didn’t exist.
I tried every door. All locked.
Eventually, I collapsed on the porch, freezing, staring through the glass at a life that had continued without me.
Then headlights appeared.
A black limousine pulled in. My grandmother, Margot DeWitt, stepped out—the powerful matriarch my father rarely challenged.
She saw me immediately. Then the house.
Her expression changed.
She turned to the driver and said one word:
“Demolish.”
She didn’t argue. Didn’t knock.
She just took my hand.
And as we walked away, I didn’t look back—because I already knew everything had just ended.
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