Chapter 1: The Cold Reality of Luck
I had spent my entire adult life trying to outrun a number. Sixty-five thousand dollars. That was the crushing weight of the student loans I had accumulated trying to earn a degree my parents deemed “useless,” yet somehow still expected me to fund entirely on my own. I drove a ten-year-old Honda Civic that rattled ominously when it hit sixty miles an hour, lived in a cramped, drafty apartment on the less glamorous side of town, and budgeted my groceries down to the exact dollar. I didn’t hate my life—I worked hard, I paid my bills, and I was proud of my independence—but the constant, low-level hum of financial anxiety was a permanent fixture in my mind.
Then, on a rainy Tuesday evening, a gas station quick-pick ticket changed the trajectory of the universe.
Two point five million dollars.
I checked the numbers on the screen six times. I refreshed the lottery app. I called the automated hotline. It wasn’t a glitch. The six numbers printed on the cheap thermal paper in my trembling hand matched the winning draw perfectly.
My first instinct wasn’t to buy a yacht or book a first-class flight to Paris. My first instinct, driven by a deeply ingrained, foolishly hopeful inner child, was to share the joy with the people who had raised me. I wanted them to be proud of me. I wanted, just for a moment, for them to look at me the way they looked at my younger sister, Selene, whenever she accomplished the bare minimum.
I drove straight to my parents’ house in the suburbs. I sat at their polished oak dining table, my palms sweating, leaving damp smudges on the wood as I held up the confirmation screen on my phone.
“Look,” I breathed, my voice barely a whisper. “I won. I actually won.”
I waited for the cheers. I waited for my mother, Marjorie, to pull me into a tight hug. I waited for my father, Leon, to clap me on the shoulder and tell me how proud he was.
Instead, a chilling silence fell over the room.
Marjorie didn’t hug me. She didn’t even smile. She leaned back in her chair, her eyes narrowing as she looked at the screen. The gears in her mind were visibly turning, calculating, assessing the resource that had just been dropped onto her table.
