“Before I sign,” I said softly, “I’d like to read one clause aloud.” Cordelia waved a dismissive hand. “Read whatever you like, dear. It changes nothing.” I flipped to page eleven and turned the folder toward Ethan. “Section 9C. The one where your mother gains controlling interest in Whitmore Holdings if our marriage produces no heir within five years.” Ethan finally looked up. “What?” Cordelia’s smile tightened. “A standard family protection clause.” “Funny,” I said, pulling my phone from my apron pocket. “Because I had it reviewed last week. By Marcus Hale.” The color drained from her face. Marcus Hale was the family’s estranged estate attorney, the one Cordelia had pushed out after Ethan’s father died under suspicious financial circumstances. “Marcus found something interesting,” I continued. “The original trust your husband left? It names Ethan as sole heir at thirty-five. Which was yesterday.” Ethan stood up slowly. “Mom. What is she talking about?” I slid a second folder across the marble. “Your father’s true will. The one she hid in 2019. Marcus kept a notarized copy.” Cordelia’s hand trembled around her wine glass. “You ungrateful little—” “I’m not the community college nobody anymore, Cordelia. I’m the forensic accountant your son married because I’m brilliant, not because I’m impressed.” Ethan opened the folder. His jaw locked as he read. “You told me Dad left everything to you. You made me beg you for my own inheritance for six years.” “Ethan, darling, she’s twisting—” “Get out of my house,” he whispered. “Mine. Not yours.” He turned to me, eyes wet. “I’m so sorry. For all of it. For tonight.” I cut him a slice of birthday cake and slid it across the marble. “Eat. We have a long conversation ahead.” Cordelia gathered her bracelet and her shame and walked into the cold Boston night. I never saw her cross our threshold again.
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