The Reckoning of Blood and Gold
I saw my son on a bench in the park, sitting there with his baby beside a pile of suitcases.
The autumn wind scattered yellow leaves around them like confetti at a funeral. Marcus sat hunched forward, elbows on his knees, head in his hands—the posture of a man who’d been gutted and left to bleed out on the sidewalk. Little
Trey, oblivious to the wreckage of his world, kicked at the fallen leaves with his light-up sneakers, making them crunch and swirl.
I asked, “Why are you here and not at the office of my company—the one I entrusted to you?”
My voice came out colder than I intended, but I needed facts before emotion. In business, as in war, intelligence precedes action.