The Trust
When my grandfather died, I didn’t even know what to wear to his funeral. I owned one black suit from a job interview years ago, and it still smelled faintly of old cologne and cheap dry-cleaning chemicals that no amount of airing could fully remove. I stood in the back of the chapel while people in tailored coats whispered about “legacy” and “real estate holdings,” like my grandfather was a company instead of a man who used to slide extra pancakes onto my plate and say, “Eat, kid.
The world doesn’t care if you’re hungry.”
Walter Hale. Seventy-nine years old. Built houses for a living—not developed them, not invested in them, built them.
Started as a framer at nineteen, worked his way to a general contractor’s license by twenty-six, and spent the next five decades turning empty lots into homes for people who needed them. He wasn’t flashy about money. He drove the same truck for twelve years, ate lunch from a thermos, and considered a new pair of work boots an extravagance worth deliberating over.
But he was good at what he did, and the homes he built held their value the way homes do when someone pours actual craftsmanship into them instead of cutting corners to meet a margin. By the time he retired, he had property, investments, and a quiet fortune that he never discussed because he considered talking about money roughly equivalent to talking about your bowel movements—technically possible, but why would you. I hadn’t seen my parents in almost a decade.
Not since they’d stopped answering my calls and told anyone who asked that they didn’t have a son. So when I stepped outside the chapel into the cold and saw Scott and Brenda Carter standing by the hearse in their coordinated winter coats, I thought my grief was playing tricks on me. My mother’s eyes skimmed over me like I was a stain on the upholstery.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
