After kicking out his adoptive mother, he discovered her $100 million fortune… but by then, it was already too late..Daniel Foster had never thought of himself as cruel, but the night he told his adoptive mother, Margaret, to leave his house, his voice was sharper than steel. Margaret had raised him since he was eight, after his biological parents were killed in a car accident. She was strict but selfless, working two jobs as a nurse and later as a medical administrator to ensure Daniel had the best schooling and opportunities.
But time has a way of eroding gratitude when resentment takes root. As Daniel entered his forties, his career as a real estate developer faltered, debts piled up, and his marriage collapsed. Margaret, now seventy-two, was slowing down, sometimes forgetful, and Daniel interpreted her occasional mistakes—like forgetting to pay a bill on time or misplacing documents—as burdens.
On a humid evening in late July, the argument erupted. Margaret had advised him, gently but firmly, to stop gambling on risky projects and to consider taking a steadier job. Daniel snapped. “You’ve done enough. If you don’t like how I live, then you can find somewhere else to stay. This is my house now.” His voice echoed through the empty halls of his suburban Atlanta home.
Margaret stood there in silence. Her frame, still dignified despite age, seemed to shrink as she set her tea cup down. “Daniel,” she whispered, “I never wanted to be a burden.” She gathered a small suitcase she had already packed—perhaps she had sensed this day coming—and walked out into the night.
Daniel felt a surge of power, followed by a void he couldn’t name. To him, it was just another step toward regaining control of his chaotic life. What he didn’t know was that Margaret carried secrets larger than any debt he had accumulated. ..
The days after Margaret left passed in a haze of self-pity and whiskey. Daniel threw himself into his failing projects with the desperation of a drowning man clawing at water. Then, one week later, the phone rang. It was a lawyer.
“Mr. Foster,” the man said, his voice measured and professional, “I represent Margaret Sinclair. She recently updated her estate documents, and as her adopted son, you should be aware of certain matters.”
Daniel frowned. “Estate? She barely had enough to cover groceries. What estate?”
The lawyer cleared his throat. “Perhaps you didn’t know. Margaret inherited a substantial trust from her late brother, Dr. William Sinclair, founder of Sinclair Pharmaceuticals. At the time of his death, the assets were quietly transferred to Margaret. As of the latest filings, the portfolio is valued at just over one hundred million dollars.”
Daniel’s heart slammed against his ribs. “What?”
“Yes. Mrs. Sinclair intended to use part of the trust to establish a foundation in your name, to help underprivileged children pursue higher education. She had already set aside the paperwork.”
Daniel nearly dropped the phone. He thought of Margaret’s threadbare sweaters, her careful coupons, the way she always insisted on fixing her old car instead of buying new. He had assumed she was barely scraping by.
“Where is she now?” Daniel asked, his voice strangled.
The lawyer hesitated. “She checked into a retirement community in Savannah. But… Mr. Foster, she has updated her will. Given recent circumstances, the foundation will still be established—but under her own name. You are no longer listed as a beneficiary.”
Daniel’s knees buckled, and he sat down hard on the marble floor of his kitchen. A hundred million. The kind of money that could erase every debt, rebuild his empire, buy him the respect he had squandered.
He saw, in a brutal flash, Margaret’s quiet eyes as she closed the door behind her. The last thing she had said: I never wanted to be a burden.
Now she was more than gone. She was untouchable.
And Daniel—he realized with a cold shiver—was poorer than ever, not because of his debts, but because he had thrown away the only person who had ever truly loved him.