Chapter 6: A Legacy Carved in Gold: The New Beginning
One year later, the harsh Massachusetts winter had finally given way to a brilliant, blooming spring.
I sat at a massive mahogany desk in a bright, sunlit office on the third floor of the Bellingham University administration building. The brass plaque on the door read: Margaret Ross, Honorary Director, The Ross-Scholarship Foundation.
I looked down at my hands. They were resting on a stack of neatly printed student essays. My hands were no longer stained with bleach or rough like sandpaper. They were soft, treated with expensive lotions, and the agonizing inflammation in my joints had subsided dramatically thanks to the top-tier medical care provided by the university’s private physicians. My knee still possessed a slight ache when it rained, but the severe, dragging limp had been corrected by surgery. I picked up a silver fountain pen, enjoying the smooth, effortless weight of it as I signed an approval form for a brilliant, impoverished young girl from Dorchester who wanted to study biomedical engineering.
I was no longer a ghost. I was a guardian.
Taking a moment to rest my eyes, I stood up and walked over to the large, floor-to-ceiling glass window that overlooked the bustling campus plaza below. Students were hurrying to class, laughing, throwing frisbees on the emerald lawns.
Then, my eyes caught a flash of movement near the perimeter of the quad.
A figure in a drab, ill-fitting gray uniform was slowly pushing a heavy, wheeled trash cart along the cobblestone path. He stopped to empty a public waste bin, hauling the heavy black plastic bag up and over the rim. I watched the physical strain in his shoulders, the exhaustion in his posture as he wrestled with the weight of other people’s garbage.
It was Connor.
His medical degree was essentially worthless. Stripped of his prestigious residency, blacklisted by Arthur’s extensive network across the eastern seaboard, and buried under a mountain of private loans he had taken out to fund his designer clothes and lavish dinners with Grace, Connor had fallen hard. He was now working as an assistant orderly and groundskeeper at a local, underfunded clinic on the outskirts of the city, working a grueling, low-paying job just to keep the debt collectors at bay.
For the first time in his life, my son was experiencing the brutal, physical toll of hard labor. He was learning the true weight of a dollar.
Down in the plaza, Connor paused to wipe the sweat from his brow. As he did, he turned and looked up at the administration building. His eyes scanned the windows and stopped at the third floor. He saw me.
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