Seven years is a long time. It is also, when you are too busy to look up, no time at all.
I finished my degree with Ethan in a carrier strapped to my chest, which my professor pretended not to notice and which Ethan slept through entirely, because from the very beginning he had impeccable timing and absolutely no interest in being inconvenient. Lucas bought the carrier at two in the morning after reading forty-seven reviews. He approached it like a legal brief. I did not tell him that was excessive. I needed that carrier and I needed him to feel useful and both things were true at the same time.
I got a job at Mercer and Hall, a mid-tier investment firm on the fourteenth floor of a building that smelled permanently of burnt coffee and someone else’s ambition. Junior Analyst. Modest salary. A desk by the window that got no sun because the building next door was taller, which my manager presented as a privilege. I said thank you and I sat down and I started reading everything I could get my hands on, because I had learned by then that the fastest way out of a room you don’t want to be in is to become indispensable to it first.
The first company I bought was a textile firm in Ohio. Three years from bankruptcy. Terrible management. Extraordinary bones. I used everything I had saved, which was not much but was enough, and I restructured it the way you fix something you actually love, carefully, without ego, with full attention to what it could be rather than what it currently was. I sold it fourteen months later at three times what I paid.
My manager called it beginner’s luck.
I called it the first one.
Ethan learned to walk that same month. He crossed Lucas’s living room floor with the absolute confidence of someone who had not yet learned that falling hurts, fell, got up, and did it again immediately. I sat on the floor watching him and I thought: yes. Exactly like that.
The companies came one after another after that. A logistics firm. A printing company everyone had written off. A small chain of regional hotels that just needed someone to stop bleeding them quietly from the inside. I saw what other people didn’t, I always had. I saw the value underneath the wreckage.
Ethan grew in the margins of all of it. He took his first steps while I was on a call. He started school while I was closing a deal in Detroit. I was there for all of it too, somehow, that is the thing nobody tells you about doing everything alone, you find a way to be in two places at once or you find a way to carry one place inside you while you are standing in the other. His school bag. His first loose tooth. His questions, which arrived constantly and which I answered carefully, because some of them were simple and some of them were not simple at all.
“Where is my dad?”
“He lives far away.”
“Does he know about me?”
“Not yet.”
“Will he?”
I would look at him then. At that jaw. Those eyes. That particular stillness he had when he was waiting for an answer, which was Adrian’s stillness, which I had once found devastating and now found simply familiar, because it was my son’s and my son was mine entirely.
“One day,” I would say. “When the time is right.”
He would nod and move on to the next thing, because Ethan Bennett was, from the very beginning, a person who accepted incomplete answers without making you feel guilty for giving them. I do not know where he got that from. Not from me. Not from Adrian. Perhaps it was just him.
Bennett Capital was registered in year four. Chicago, because I knew the market and because it was not New York, and because sometimes the city you choose is the armour you wear. I hired three people, then six, then twelve. I was photographed at galas I attended in dresses I had not had time to try on properly beforehand, standing next to people who had inherited their power and smiling in a way that did not show how tired I was. I got very good at that smile. It became a kind of second skin.
The Forbes profile ran in year five. “The woman who sees value where everyone else sees wreckage.” The photographer made me stand in front of the Bennett Capital sign for forty minutes. The journalist was young and earnest and used the phrase “self-made” so many times I started counting. I flew to London the following month to open the second office and stood in a glass-walled conference room above the Thames and let myself have thirty seconds of something that felt like pride before I went back inside and got to work.
The interview that everyone remembers came in year six.
A journalist, end of a long session, leaned forward and asked who had inspired my drive. The way journalists always ask it, like they are expecting someone to say their mother or a teacher or a book they read at fourteen.
I smiled.
“Someone who taught me that no one is coming to save you,” I said.
She wrote it down with a pleased nod. It became the closing quote. People emailed me about it for months. One woman had it printed on a canvas for her home office. Several others told me they found it deeply motivational, that it had changed something for them, that it was exactly what they needed to hear.
I read every email and I thought the same thing every time.
I did not mean it the way you heard it.
I meant it the way I said it to myself every single morning. Standing in front of a mirror in whatever city I was in, looking at my own face, saying it like a reminder and a warning and a hand at my own back all at once.
No one is coming. So you had better keep going.
I kept going.
Seven years. Six companies. One secret I carried so carefully for so long that some mornings I forgot it was a secret and thought it was just part of who I was.
It wasn’t, of course.
Secrets have a way of finding the exit on their own schedule, not yours. And year seven, as it turned out, had very different plans for me than I had made for it.