MY STEPFATHER FIRED ME BECAUSE HIS BIOLOGICAL SON WANTED MY JOB — KARMA DIDN’T LET IT SLIDE.
I’ve been working for my dad’s construction company since I was 15. Not by choice, but because I had to. “Earn your keep” was his favorite line. I paid actual rent as a teen. He married my mom when I was 10, and from that day on, it felt like I was more of a tenant than family.
But I put my head down and worked hard, thinking one day it’d pay off.
But then David, his biological son, suddenly reappeared. He’d been gone for years, blaming Dad for his mom’s affair.
Now, fresh out of college with a fancy construction management degree, he wanted in. But I never saw what was coming.
One day, my dad calls me into his office and says, “We need to let you go.” I was speechless. I’d been with the company for over a decade, building it from nothing.
When I asked why, he just looked at me and said, “David’s got the degree, and we don’t have room for both of you. It’s time I help him get on his feet.”
I didn’t lose it. I just left, trusting that the universe would handle the rest. And, well, let’s just say karma doesn’t miss.
About six months later, I …
…got a call from an old coworker, laughing so hard he could barely breathe.
“You are not gonna believe this,” he wheezed.
I smirked, already having a good idea where this was going. “Try me.”
“David—golden boy David—completely tanked a million-dollar contract. TANKED. He didn’t read the regulations right, ordered the wrong materials, and now the city shut them down for violations. The company’s bleeding money, man. It’s bad.“
I leaned back in my chair, grinning. “No kidding?”
“Oh, and your stepfather?” My friend chuckled. “He’s begging the old clients to stay, but no one trusts him anymore. You were the one who kept everything together. Now? It’s all falling apart.“
I took a deep breath, relishing the moment. I wasn’t one for revenge, but… damn, this was satisfying.
And the best part?
I wasn’t struggling.
When my stepfather fired me, I took every skill, every contact, every relationship I’d built and walked right into a better job—with his biggest competitor.
And now?
His clients were coming to me.
So, when my phone buzzed again that afternoon, I wasn’t surprised to see my stepfather’s name on the screen.
I let it ring.
Then, just for fun, I sent him a text.
“Sorry, too busy working. Maybe David can help? Oh wait. 😉”
I put my phone down, grinning.
Karma didn’t miss.
And neither did I.