“Go down to the river with the crocodiles,” my father told me as he pushed me into the Amazon. My son just looked at me and smiled. He thought my two billion dollars were his. But later that day, when I got home… I was sitting on the chair waiting…

The Amazon River stretched endlessly before me, its dark waters pulsing with a thirst for ancestral power. My son and my wife had attended this luxurious trip to South America, claiming it would be a great bonding experience. But I knew it was just another of their well-coordinated, but superficial, efforts at reconnection. But as I stood on the edge of the boat, looking out at the vast jungle beyond, I sensed that something had gone right.

The day had been filled with forced smiles and pleasant conversation, but a lingering suspicion settled inside me. I’d worked my entire life to amass a fortune—two billion dollars, to be exact—and I’d always believed my family was proud of me. But lately, there’d been a change in my behavior. The casual comments about money, the wishful glances, and the subtle hints that maybe it was time for me to hand over the reins. I ignored it, but in the end, I feared the worst.

It was only when we reached the part of the river where crocodiles were known to roam that everything became clear below. My wife, who had always been excessively polite, approached me with her warm breath in my ear. “Are we going down with the crocodiles?” she exclaimed, with a strange cry that made me not trust her completely.

Before I could react, I felt a strong push on my back. I staggered forward, arms flailing as I fell into the murky waters of the Amazon. I struggled to regain my balance, but the current was relentless, pulling me toward the abyss. Panic gripped me as I realized it hadn’t been an accident. My own blood had betrayed me, and I believed I would drown, that my wealth was now mine.

I gasped as the boat pulled away, my son’s figure barely visible in the distance. He didn’t even look at me; he was grinning, satisfied, thinking he’d won. But he wasn’t dead yet. I was determined to let him take away what he’d built. With all my strength, I made my way to the shore, my muscles aching and my palms burning. When I finally emerged from the water, soaked and shivering, I knew this was only the beginning.

When I returned home, I was defeated. I felt stronger than ever, with a sharp mind and a cold, calculating determination. I had always been the one pulling the strings, and I wasn’t going to allow my family to turn my life’s work into heresy.

I sat at my desk in the house that had once felt like home, and the familiar story now seemed so threatening. I was alone, but not defenseless. I thought I would be too weak to defend myself after what had happened at the river. I thought I was old, frail, and weak. But the fact of the matter today was that I had survived worse. I had underestimated myself.

My first call was to my lawyer. I needed to make sure my will was intact and my estate was secure, regardless of what my son and wife thought. But that wasn’t enough. I needed to make them pay. I wasn’t going to let it destroy me if consequences came.

I spent the next few days carefully pacing. I studied every detail of my son’s life, every character flaw I could exploit. I received evidence of his greed, his arrogance, and his boundless ambition. The wounds I had once built to protect my family from the outside world had now become the wounds that kept me from the inside. But he would be my strength in the war I was about to fight.

I knew that the next time I saw them, I would recognize the person I had once called my father and mother. I would make them regret the day they thought they could push me into the river. I would learn that my wealth lay not only in dollars, but in the strength I had fought for all these years. And that it was time to take back what was mine.

The meeting was set. My son and my wife had no idea that I knew everything. I still believed that I had won, that I had succeeded in taking away what was mine without repercussions. I had no idea that I had been carefully, carefully lost, that I had failed.

I waited for them at my desk; the chair I’d previously rested on now seemed a piece of junk. When they arrived, I felt the same satisfaction and confidence as always. But when they saw me, something changed. I was no longer the old man I’d thrown into the river. I was the man who had built my empire, and my life was far from over.

—Father, it was an extra iпteпcióп… —my son began, but I raised my hand and silenced him.

“You thought you could take away my strength,” I said in a low, controlled voice. “You thought I wouldn’t survive. But here I am, and now it’s time for you to face the consequences.”

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I revealed everything: the hidden notes, the embezzlement, the lies I had told to secure my position. Their faces paled as they realized I knew what I was planning all along. I wanted to talk, but I wasn’t interested in excuses. It was too late.

—I’ve made sure your greed will cost you dearly, I said. —Every penny you spend will be accounted for, and you’ll be left with nothing. You won’t get away with it.

They remained speechless, stunned by the revelation. The situation had changed, and now I had every opportunity to win. Not only was my wealth back, but my life as well. He had pushed me into the river, thinking I would drown. But instead, I had emerged stronger, more determined, and ready to show them how wrong they were.

Looking at them, I knew this was the end. It was only the beginning of the next chapter, the one in which they would regain control, piece by piece, until they had nothing left to reclaim. The river had been the test; it had failed.And now, I would make sure he paid for every betrayal.