I once believed the most devastating moments in life announced themselves with thunder. I was wrong. The worst night I ever lived began with excitement I had carefully prepared, wrapped in pride and hope, and carried in the trunk of my car like a fragile gift.
Two years earlier, after selling my first company, I did what I had dreamed of since my student days. I bought my parents a home. Not a mansion, not a showpiece, but a quiet place on the edge of a coastal European city where the mornings smelled of salt and bread from a nearby bakery. I told them it was their reward, that they had earned rest after a lifetime of sacrifice. They cried, my mother more than my father, and promised to finally slow down.
That night, I decided to surprise them. I did not call. I did not text. I imagined my mother laughing when she opened the door, my father shaking his head and calling me irresponsible for driving so far without warning. I bought a good bottle of wine and rehearsed nothing, because love never needs a script.
