Michael’s father was a man who lived his life by a simple philosophy: “A man’s worth is in his tools.” When he passed, the only thing Michael inherited was a heavy, rusted metal toolbox. It was old, dented, and firmly locked, with a thick padlock that showed no sign of a key. Michael’s stepmother, a woman named Beatrice, was a different story. She was a woman of extravagant tastes and had always viewed Michael with a thinly veiled disdain. The day after the funeral, she found Michael in the garage, staring at the toolbox. “You can throw that old thing away,” she said with a shrug. “It’s just junk.” When Michael refused, she smiled sweetly and offered him a check for $5,000. “Consider it a gift,” she said. “A little something to remember your father by.”
Michael, who was struggling financially, was tempted. But he knew his father. A man who left a locked toolbox behind was a man who had a secret. He refused the money, and with a determined glint in his eye, he began his search for a locksmith. The truth, when it came, was far more complicated than a simple treasure hunt. The toolbox contained a hidden compartment. Inside, nestled among a few old tools, was a small, worn leather-bound journal. The journal was his father’s memoir, a story of his life, his work, his passions, and his one great regret: he had never been able to tell Michael how much he loved him. The last page of the journal contained the combination to a safe deposit box. Inside, Michael found not a pile of money, but a set of blueprints for a new, revolutionary tool.
Michael, a man who had once been a carpenter’s apprentice, was now the owner of a vast, but morally compromised, empire. The inheritance was a burden, a reminder of a past he had worked so hard to escape. He gave the money to a charity, and he used his new-found power to expose the truth about his family’s business. He did not want the money. He wanted justice.