I picked up the pen. Brielle’s shoulders dropped in relief, and Trent actually smirked around a forkful of my casserole. “Smart choice, Margaret,” he said. I clicked the pen twice. Then I slid the papers back across the granite, untouched. “Before I sign,” I said softly, “I’d like you both to meet someone.” I tapped my phone. The front door opened, and in walked Lillian Park — my late husband’s estate attorney — followed by a second woman in a charcoal blazer carrying a leather binder. “Brielle, Trent, this is Detective Ramos. White-collar division.” Brielle’s face went the color of skim milk. “Mom, what is this—” “This,” I said, “is the part where I explain that your father and I updated the trust eleven months ago, when he was first diagnosed. Everything — the house, the insurance, the brokerage — sits inside an irrevocable trust. I am not the trustee. You cannot petition me for control of assets I do not legally own.” Lillian set the binder down with a quiet thud. “Additionally,” she added, “the $48,000 in wire transfers from your father’s joint account to your LLC between March and August? Those were not authorized. We have signatures. We have dates. We have your husband’s email confirming receipt.” Trent slowly set down the fork. Detective Ramos opened a notebook. “Mrs. Vance has not yet decided whether to press charges. That decision depends entirely on the next ten minutes of your cooperation.” Brielle started to cry the way she used to cry at sixteen — loud, performative, expecting rescue. I stood up, walked around the island, and gently took the diamond studs out of her ears. “Your father bought these,” I said. “You’ll get them back when you’ve earned them. Repay the trust. Sign Trent’s confession. And don’t ever walk into my house uninvited again.” Then I picked up the guardianship forms, fed them into the shredder, and poured myself a fresh cup of coffee while my daughter learned, for the first time in her life, that grief is not the same thing as weakness.
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