I cleared my throat and stood. “Before I read anything, Diane, I want to thank you. Truly. Because six months ago, when you told me the Whitaker Foundation needed a ‘trustworthy family signature’ on some routine paperwork, I almost signed without reading.” Diane’s smile flickered. “I said almost.” I pulled a second folder from my tote bag. “See, I’m a nurse. I read charts for a living. Small print is my whole world. So when you handed me those documents last October, I took them to my uncle Ray first. Uncle Ray is a forensic accountant with the IRS.” The clinking of silverware stopped completely. David’s fork froze midair. “Turns out the Whitaker Foundation hasn’t been a charity for four years. It’s been laundering rental income from properties Diane secretly transferred out of the family trust, cutting David and his sister Megan out entirely.” Megan’s head snapped up. “What?” “Two point one million,” I said quietly. “Rerouted to an account only Diane controls. I have the statements. Uncle Ray has copies. And a very patient friend at the state AG’s office has the rest.” Diane’s face went the color of the tablecloth. “You ungrateful little—” “I’m not signing your postnup, Diane. But I did bring something for you to sign.” I slid a document across the mahogany. “It’s a voluntary restitution agreement. Return Megan and David’s share by Friday, resign from the foundation board, and the AG considers cooperation. Refuse, and Monday morning gets very loud.” David finally looked at me, eyes wet. “Ellie, I didn’t know—” “I know you didn’t, David. That’s why I waited until today.” Megan stood, walked around the table, and hugged me so hard my earrings shook. Diane’s hand trembled as she picked up the pen. Uncle Ray, seated quietly by the window in his gray suit, raised his mimosa in a silent toast. I sat back down and finally, calmly, took a sip of my coffee. It had never tasted better.
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