I set the flute down. Slowly. The clink against crystal was the only sound in the room. “You want me to read it, Diane? Okay.” I picked up the letter. My voice didn’t shake this time. “To Whom It May Concern: Hannah Reyes served as lead forensic accountant at Bellamy & Cole from 2016 to 2021. She resigned after reporting internal financial misconduct to the SEC. Her testimony resulted in three convictions.” The room went dead silent. Diane’s smile cracked. “That’s — that’s not — the investigator said —” “Your investigator,” I said, “contacted my old firm two months ago. They called me the same afternoon.” I reached into my clutch and pulled out a second envelope. Thicker. “So I had someone look into you, too.” David finally looked up. I slid the envelope to him instead of her. “The ‘charity’ you’ve been running out of Dad’s estate, Diane. The one you told everyone was funding the children’s hospital? I have the bank records. The withdrawals. The Cabo condo you bought in June. The car in your sister’s name.” Diane stood up so fast her chair screamed against the floor. “You went through my —” “I went through public filings,” I said. “You should really stop underestimating forensic accountants.” David opened the envelope. His face drained as he flipped page after page. Aunt Meredith — the one who’d donated twelve thousand dollars last Christmas — set down her fork very, very carefully. “Diane,” she said. “Is this true?” Diane’s mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. Nothing came out. I picked up my champagne, took one slow sip, and looked her dead in the eye. “Happy anniversary, Mom.” David stood, walked around the table, and took my hand. Not hers. Mine. And as the whispers rose like a tide around Diane, I realized something beautiful: she’d spent three years building this stage. I just gave the better performance.
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