The winning numbers burned themselves into my memory the moment they appeared on the screen: 4-12-28-35-42, Mega Ball 11. I was sitting in my basement room—though calling it a room was generous; it was more of a converted storage space with a camping cot and a space heater that only worked when it felt like it—watching the lottery draw on my battered laptop. When all six numbers matched, I didn’t scream.
I didn’t jump up and down. I didn’t even smile. I sat there in the flickering blue light of the screen, listening to the sound of laughter drifting down from upstairs where my family was entertaining dinner guests, and I felt something shift inside my chest.
Four hundred and fifty million dollars. After taxes and choosing the lump sum, I’d walk away with approximately two hundred and eighty million in cold, hard cash. Enough money to buy and sell my family’s entire world a hundred times over.
But I didn’t move. Not yet. That rainy Tuesday morning three years ago, while my family still slept upstairs in their comfortable beds, I drove my rusting 2005 Toyota Corolla to the office of Maxwell & Associates, the most prestigious and discreet law firm in San Diego.
I paid them a retainer of fifty thousand dollars in cash—money I’d scraped together over years of overtime shifts and side jobs they knew nothing about—and I told them exactly what I needed. “I want a blind trust. Completely anonymous.
I want my name buried so deep that it would take an army of forensic accountants years to find it. And I want to know every legal way to protect my identity as the winner.”
The lawyer, a silver-haired woman named Patricia Maxwell, studied me across her mahogany desk. I was still wearing my janitor’s uniform, smelling faintly of industrial cleaner and floor wax.
To her credit, she didn’t even blink. “May I ask why the secrecy, Mr. Miller?”
I looked down at my work-roughened hands.
“Because I need to know if the people who are supposed to love me actually do. And I already know the answer. I just need to see it with my own eyes.”
She nodded slowly, asked no more questions, and got to work.
By the time I claimed my prize two weeks later, I was officially a ghost. The trust had a name—Meridian Holdings—and a registered agent who wasn’t me. The state of California would release a statement saying a San Diego resident had claimed the jackpot but wished to remain anonymous.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
