Richard slid a settlement across the table — twelve thousand dollars and a nondisclosure — and tapped it twice with his gold pen. ‘Sign it, Emma. Save yourself the humiliation.’ I finally opened the folder. Inside was a single certified document from the New York State Bar. ‘Richard,’ I said softly, ‘I passed the bar eighteen months ago. David paid for night school. He wanted it to be a surprise for our anniversary.’ The stenographer’s fingers froze. One of the partners coughed into his fist. I slid a second document across the polished wood. ‘This is the deed to the cottage, transferred into an irrevocable trust nine months before David died. He knew what you’d try. He told me you’d tried it on his mother, too.’ Richard’s smile cracked at the edges. I kept going, calm, almost gentle. ‘And this,’ I said, placing a third folder in front of the senior partner across from me, ‘is a complaint I’m filing with the disciplinary committee — for attempted fraudulent conveyance, elder financial abuse of David’s grandmother in 2019, and the small matter of you using firm resources to pursue a personal claim against a former client’s spouse.’ The room went absolutely still. The senior partner opened the folder, read two lines, and quietly closed it. He didn’t look at Richard. He looked at me. ‘Mrs. Halston,’ he said, ‘on behalf of the firm, we’d like a private moment with our partner.’ I stood, smoothed my blazer, and picked up my folder. At the door, I turned. ‘Richard — the cottage isn’t family property. It never was. But your name is about to be, on every disciplinary docket in the state.’ I walked out into the sunlight. David’s cottage was waiting. And for the first time in six months, so was the rest of my life.
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