I set the tray down on the antique console table, very gently, the way my grandmother taught me to set down things that mattered. Then I smiled. Brandon hated when I smiled like that. “Okay,” I said. “Let’s talk about what everyone in town is going to know.” Cassidy laughed, that bright little bell laugh she practiced in mirrors. Brandon’s jaw tightened. He hadn’t expected agreement. He’d expected tears. I walked to the drawer beneath the console, the one he never opened because he thought it held napkins, and I pulled out a slim blue folder. “Three months ago,” I said, “your grandfather’s attorney called me. Turns out Pop-Pop didn’t trust you after the boat incident in 2019. He restructured the trust before he passed. The Charleston house, the Kiawah cottage, the shipping company shares, the brokerage accounts you’ve been borrowing against. They were never yours, Brandon. They were always mine. He left them to the wife, contingent on the marriage. Read it. It’s notarized.” The color drained from his face in real time, like watching a photograph develop in reverse. Cassidy stopped laughing. She looked at Brandon, then at the folder, then at the door. “You can still have the divorce,” I said softly. “In fact, I insist. My attorney filed this morning. But the houses go back to the trust the moment you sign. Your mother’s allowance stops. The country club membership is in my name. And the loan you took out against the Kiawah property? That’s fraud, sweetheart. Pop-Pop’s attorney already flagged it.” Brandon reached for the folder with a hand that wouldn’t stay steady. Cassidy was already backing toward the door, her heels clicking faster than her excuses. I picked up the tray of cinnamon rolls and carried it to the kitchen, humming. Twelve years of silence wasn’t weakness. It was inventory. And Brandon had just learned that the quiet woman in the apron had been counting every single thing he thought he owned.
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