Mr. Halloran adjusted his glasses. “Before I read Mr. Whitcombe’s final will, I’ve been asked to share a letter he wrote three weeks before his passing.” Margaux waved impatiently. “Skip the sentiment, Harold. Just tell us what we’re getting.” Halloran didn’t look up. “He wrote: ‘To my family — you spent thirty years measuring worth by last names and country club memberships. Only one person in this house ever asked how I was feeling after my diagnosis. Only one person drove ninety minutes every Sunday to sit with me while I lost my words. That person is Elena.'” The room went silent. Margaux’s flute lowered an inch. Halloran turned the page. “‘Therefore, the entirety of Whitcombe Holdings — the shipping company, the Newport property, and the controlling shares of the family trust — passes to my daughter-in-law, Elena Marsh, to be administered at her sole discretion.'” Margaux stood so fast her chair scraped the floor. “That’s not legal. She married in. She’s not blood.” I finally spoke, quiet as I’d always been. “Actually, Margaux, I drafted the amendment myself. Your father asked me to, because his own attorney kept ‘losing’ the paperwork.” I glanced at David’s mother, who suddenly found the carpet fascinating. “I also found the transfers, by the way. The ones moving company funds into Margaux’s boutique for the last four years. About two point three million, if I’m rounding kindly.” Margaux’s face drained white. “You wouldn’t.” “I already did. Forensic audit closed Monday. The board votes Thursday.” I picked up my coat. “Oh — and about those leftovers?” I smiled for the first time all day. “The kitchen staff, whose Christmas bonuses you cut last year? I’ve already reinstated them. Retroactively. Out of your discretionary fund.” David stood beside me. Halloran hid a smile behind his folder. And for the first time in eleven years, no one in that room told me where to sit.
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