Smile for the camera, sweetheart — show everyone the gold-digger who thought she could

Eleanor lifted her champagne flute toward the crowd. “To my son, who married beneath himself but is, thankfully, still young enough to correct the mistake.” Laughter. Polite, cruel, the kind that hides behind pearls. Adam’s jaw tightened beside me, but I touched his wrist. Not yet. The emcee stepped to the microphone to announce the evening’s largest donor — the anonymous benefactor who had single-handedly funded the new children’s wing at St. Catherine’s Hospital. Eleanor straightened. She had donated forty thousand dollars and expected her name on a plaque the size of a billboard. “This year,” the emcee said, “our benefactor has chosen to reveal herself.” A spotlight swung. It did not land on Eleanor. It landed on me. I stepped forward, slid the envelope from my clutch, and handed it to the emcee. He read aloud: “Hannah Whitlock, sole heir of the late Margaret Ashford of Geneva, has donated four-point-two million dollars in her grandmother’s memory.” The room inhaled as one. Eleanor’s flute slipped a half inch. Ashford. The name she had buried. The mother she had abandoned at a nursing home in Switzerland decades ago to chase a richer surname. The grandmother who had quietly tracked me down two years ago, who had video-called me every Sunday, who had left me everything because, in her words, I was the only Whitlock who ever sent her flowers. I turned to Eleanor, voice gentle, because gentleness cuts deeper than rage. “Grandma Margaret said to tell you she forgave you. She just didn’t trust you with the money.” Eleanor’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. Adam took my hand, and we walked past her, past the whispers, past the woman who had spent three years trying to make me small. At the door I paused. “Oh — and the necklace you’re wearing? It was hers. The lawyer would like it back by Monday.”

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