Eleanor took the seat at the head of MY table like she’d already inherited it. Trevor leaned against the marble island, scrolling his phone, muttering about which contractor he’d hire to gut the place. I walked to the bookshelf in the hallway and pulled down a thin leather portfolio David had labeled simply: ELEANOR. I’d never opened it. He’d told me, six months before he died, “If she ever comes for you, this is your shield. Promise me you won’t open it until she does.” I’d promised. I opened it now. Inside were certified copies of three documents. The first was the deed to the brownstone, transferred into an irrevocable trust two years ago, with Lily as the sole beneficiary and me as trustee. Eleanor’s name appeared nowhere. Neither did David’s, legally speaking. The second document was a notarized letter from David’s estate attorney confirming Eleanor had already received her inheritance, in full, in 2019, when David paid off the $340,000 second mortgage she’d secretly taken against HER own house and begged him to cover. The receipts were stapled to the back. The third document was the one that made Trevor drop his phone. A paternity test, ordered by David himself, dated four months before his death. Trevor was not his half-brother. Trevor was Eleanor’s nephew, the son of her sister, raised as her own after a scandal she’d spent thirty years burying. David had known. David had documented everything. I slid the portfolio across the table. Eleanor’s hand trembled as she read. The funeral guests had gone silent, every eye on us. “You came into my home,” I said softly, “three hours after I buried your son, and tried to take the only thing he left our daughter. So here’s what’s going to happen. You’re going to walk out that door. You’re never going to contact Lily again. And if you so much as whisper the word ‘unfit’ near a courthouse, every person in David’s contact list gets a copy of what’s in your hand.” Eleanor stood. Her pearls didn’t click this time. Trevor followed her out without a word. Lily climbed into my lap, and for the first time since the accident, I let myself cry, holding the shield my husband had built for me from the grave.
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