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Time to Meet the Sharks,” My Daughter-in-Law Murmured Before Pushing Me Overboard. My Son Grinned as the Ocean Consumed Me—All for My Ten-Million-Dollar Fortune.

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Time to meet the sharks, my daughter-in-law murmured before shoving me overboard. My son stood by, grinning, as the waves swallowed me whole. His prize? My ten-million-pound fortune.

Over to the sharks, I muttered as I plunged into the sea. The English Channel swallowed me instantly. The bright sky above blurred, replaced by the icy grip of saltwater. Gasping, I broke the surface just in time to see them one last timemy son William and his wife, Charlotteleaning against the yachts railing, clinking champagne glasses in celebration.

At seventy-one, I was no longer the spry man I once was, but years of early morning swims in Cornwall had toughened me against the sea. My limbs ached as I fought the current, but survival was second nature. Id clawed my way up from a bricklayers son to a property tycoon worth millions. And now my own flesh and blood had tossed me aside like rubbish.

For years, Id sensed Charlottes smiles were more calculation than kindnessreserved for designer handbags, staged photos, and whispered plans for my wealth. William, my only son, had floated through life since university, softened by privilege. Id told myself hed find his spine, that hed harden into the man Id raised. But under the yachts golden lights, I realised Id chosen his backbone for him: Charlotte.

Salt stung my eyes as I swam toward the shadowed coastline. The distance was brutal, but fury carried me farther than the tide. Every stroke was fuelled by betrayal. When I finally dragged myself onto the pebbled shore hours later, my body screamed, but my mind had never been clearer.

If they thought weakness would finish me, finelet them savour their victory. But once they stepped into my London townhouse, Id be waiting. And Id give them a gift theyd never forget.

William and Charlotte returned to the office three days later, their story polished. A tragic accident, Charlotte told the staff, her eyes glistening as condolences poured in. Theyd reported me lost at sea, too frail to survive. No body, just paperwork and hushed whispers.

In the library, surrounded by oak shelves, they toasted with whiskey. Their laughter rang with triumphuntil Charlotte clicked the remote. The screen flickered to life, not with news, but with my face.

Surprise, my recorded voice echoed. Williams glass slipped from his hand. Charlottes lips parted, soundless.

The video continued. If youre watching this, youve tried to take what I built. You want the money? Fine. But youll inherit the truth with it.

Id seen the betrayal coming years ago. My solicitor, a man Id trusted since my youth, had helped me set up a trust. If I died suspiciously, every penny would go to charitiesveterans homes, scholarships, hospitals. Charlotte had mocked my donations as guilt cheques. She never guessed they were my contingency plan.

Ten million pounds, I said onscreen, and not a penny will line your pockets unless you earn it as I didsacrifice by sacrifice.

The screen went dark. Silence thickened the air.

Then came the final blow. I strode through the library door, alive and unbroken. My suit crisp, my stance unshaken, the gash on my temple the only mark of my ordeal. William went pale, knees buckling like a boy caught stealing biscuits. Charlotte, though, stood rigid, her gaze sharp as a cardsharps.

You should be dead, she spat.

Yet here I stand, I replied. And heres my gift: freedom. From me, from the fortune you prized above family. Pack your things. By dawn, youre out of this house, my company, my life. The moneys yours to losebut youll lose it all the same.

Charlotte wasnt one to surrender quietly. You cant cut us off, she hissed, pacing like a caged fox. Williams your son. You owe him.

William stayed silent, sweat beading on his brow.

Owe him? I snapped. I gave him every advantageeducation, a career, a seat at the table. And he repaid me by conspiring to kill me.

Charlottes smirk returned. Whod believe a bitter old man accusing his son of murder? Youve no proof.

Youre mistaken.

From my desk, I pulled a waterproof pouchthe one Id strapped to my belt before she pushed me. Inside was a GoPro. Its footage showed Charlottes chilling whisperTime to meet the sharksand Williams laughter.

William crumpled into a chair. Charlottes face went blank. Youre cruel, she said softly. You never wanted a son. You wanted a soldier.

The words stung, but not for long. I had loved my son. Part of me still did. But love couldnt overlook betrayal.

At dawn, their suitcases waited by the door. I watched them leave, the gravel crunching like shattered chains.

The house fell silent. In the library, I sipped coffee in my leather chair, my strength unbroken, my life reclaimed.

But the money had lost its lustre. In the weeks that followed, I rang charities, signed cheques, diverted my wealth to those whod truly need itveterans, students, hospitals. That was the real gift: turning greed into grace.

As for William? Perhaps one day hed returneither as a beggar or a penitent man. Until then, the sharks would always circle in the waters between us.

The lesson? Trust is earned, not inherited. And sometimes, the greatest fortune is the one you give away.

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