I left my manor, taking with me only my pride… then a brutal fall erased my memories and the life I had known. Dressed in rags, I wandered the streets, begging, while people insulted me: “Go away, old woman!” I thought it was all over, until a young beggar offered me his only piece of bread and whispered gently, “Don’t cry, Grandmother. I’m here for you.” I never imagined that this moment would change the course of our lives.

I left my manor, taking with me only my pride… then a brutal fall erased my memories and the life I had known. Dressed in rags, I wandered the streets, begging, while people insulted me: “Go away, old woman!” I thought it was all over, until a young beggar offered me his only piece of bread and whispered gently, “Don’t cry, Grandmother. I’m here for you.” I never imagined that this moment would change the course of our lives.

The night I left everything behind

I fled my mansion with only my pride as baggage.

That phrase still echoed in my mind long after everything else had disappeared.

My name is  Eleanor Hayes  — but on this cold October night, I had forgotten it.

All I remembered was the argument.

I was standing in the marble entrance hall of a house far too large to feel at home in, listening to my son accuse me of ruining his life. My daughter-in-law stood behind him, arms crossed, silent but approving.

Strangely, her silence was more painful than her cries.

My husband had died three years earlier, leaving behind a powerful private equity empire. Since then, the company had become a battleground.

Everyone wanted something.

Control.

Signatures.

Authority.

And above all, they wanted me to keep quiet.

Sitting demurely in a corner, like an expensive antique that nobody really needed.

“I’m not dead yet,” I retorted.

My son’s face hardened.

Daniel Hayes  looked at me coldly.

“So stop acting like a victim,” he said. “And sign the papers.”

I didn’t do it.

Instead, I grabbed my coat, went out the front door, and got behind the wheel.

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