I picked up the pen. Eleanor’s lips curled in triumph. Daniel finally looked up, eyes pleading. I clicked the pen twice, then set it down beside the contract, untouched. “Before I sign anything, Eleanor, I’d like to ask you about the Whitcomb Foundation’s Q3 filings.” Her smile froze. “The transfers to the Cayman shell, the one registered to your late sister’s maiden name. Two-point-four million, wasn’t it? Routed through the Hartford office on October eleventh.” The wine glass stopped halfway to her mouth. I reached into my bag, the cheap canvas one she’d sneered at when I walked in, and pulled out a slim folder. “I’m a forensic accountant, Eleanor. The waitressing pays my rent because I refuse to take Daniel’s money until we’re married. The other job, the one I never bring up at dinner, is consulting for the IRS Criminal Investigation Division.” Daniel’s head snapped toward his mother. “You’ve been under review for nine months. I didn’t know it was your foundation until last Tuesday, when my supervisor handed me the file and I saw your name. I recused myself within the hour. I have the email to prove it.” Eleanor’s hand trembled. “You can’t…” “I’m not the one doing anything. The audit was opened long before Daniel and I met. But here’s what’s funny about prenups, Eleanor. They protect assets. They don’t protect against federal forfeiture.” I stood up and smoothed my apron. “You wanted me to sign away any claim to the Whitcomb estate. In about six weeks, there won’t be one to claim.” Daniel rose slowly beside me, took my hand, and for the first time all night, his spine was straight. “Mom,” he said quietly, “I think Maya and I are going to skip dessert.” We walked out past the white roses, past the butler, past the Bentley in the drive. On the porch, Daniel kissed my forehead and laughed, shaky and free. Behind us, through the leaded glass, I heard the wine glass finally fall.
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