PART 2: The Bugatti Moment
I killed the engine. The deep, menacing rumble of the matte-black Bugatti La Voiture Noire died down, leaving only silence hanging over the quiet suburban street.
The front door of the house was already open. My father stood on the porch in his best navy suit, talking to two important clients. Nathan was beside him, laughing too loudly. My mother hovered behind them in a designer dress that probably cost more than most people’s yearly salary.
They all turned at the same time.
For three long seconds, nobody moved.
Then my father’s champagne glass slipped from his fingers and shattered on the stone steps.
“Elias…?” His voice cracked like thin ice.
I stepped out of the car slowly, letting them take it all in. The $18.7 million hypercar. The perfectly tailored black Tom Ford suit. The Patek Philippe on my wrist. The calm, cold expression on my face.
Nathan’s rented Mercedes suddenly looked like a cheap toy.
“What the actual fuck…” Nathan whispered.
My mother’s hand flew to her chest. “Oh my God…”
I walked toward the porch like I owned the entire neighborhood.
“Good morning,” I said evenly. “I’m here for Grandpa’s wooden box. Ten o’clock, just like I promised.”
My father staggered forward two steps, then his knees gave out. He collapsed right there on the manicured front lawn. One of the clients rushed to help him, but he pushed the man away, eyes locked on me in pure disbelief.
“Elias… son… what is this?” he gasped. “Where did you get that car?”
I stopped a few feet away and looked down at him.
“Three years ago, on a Wednesday morning, I won $427 million. After taxes, I walked away with $268 million in cash. I never told any of you. Not once.”
The silence that followed was deafening.
My mother’s voice came out broken. “You let us treat you like that… for three whole years?”
I met her eyes without mercy.
“I needed to know who you really were when I had nothing. Turns out you were exactly who I always feared.”
Nathan stepped forward, face twisted with rage and jealousy. “You’re lying. There’s no way a loser like you—”
“That ‘loser’ just paid cash for a car worth more than everything you’ve ever touched in your life,” I cut him off. “Same way I bought the penthouse at The Regent, the villa in Malibu, and the three other cars sitting in my garage right now.”
I walked past all of them into the house, straight down to the damp basement I had called home for three years. Grandpa’s old wooden box was exactly where I left it. I picked it up carefully and headed back upstairs.
When I stepped outside again, my father was back on his feet, supported by Nathan. Both of them looked smaller than I had ever seen them.
“What are you going to do now?” my father asked, voice shaking.
I placed the box gently on the passenger seat of the Bugatti.
“I’m going to live the life I deserve,” I said. “Without any of you in it.”
My mother rushed forward, grabbing my arm desperately.
“Elias, please! We’re family. We didn’t know—”
“You didn’t want to know,” I replied, removing her hand. “You enjoyed having someone to look down on. Today, that someone is gone.”
I slid into the driver’s seat. The scissor door closed with a soft, expensive thud.
The engine roared back to life — a deep, savage sound that vibrated through the entire street.
As I pulled away, I glanced in the rearview mirror one last time.
My father was on his knees again.
My mother was sobbing.
Nathan stood frozen, staring at the black monster disappearing down the road.
I didn’t feel joy.
I didn’t feel sadness.
I just felt… free.
Leave a Comment