I clicked the pen open. Then I clicked it closed. Then I set it down. “Before I sign,” I said quietly, “I think we should call Harold.” Whitney’s smile flickered. Harold was the family’s actual estate attorney — not the eager young man she’d hired to bully me. “Harold retired,” she said quickly. “That’s funny,” I replied, “because Harold sent me a birthday card last month. From his office.” I pulled out my phone and dialed on speaker. Harold picked up on the second ring. “Elena, sweetheart, I’ve been waiting for your call. Is Whitney there pretending the lake house is trust property again?” The room went very still. See, what Whitney didn’t know was that David hadn’t been the quiet, distracted husband she assumed. Two years ago, when his mother’s dementia began and Whitney started ‘helping’ with the accounts, David quietly moved the lake house, our savings, and his share of the family business into an irrevocable trust in my name. He’d shown me the paperwork the night before his heart attack. He’d made me promise not to fight his family — just to wait. Harold’s voice filled the office. “Whitney, I have the original deed, the trust documents, and roughly forty-seven emails where you instructed your brother’s caregiver to withhold his heart medication because it was ‘making him foggy about finances.’ The state attorney general has copies. So does the medical board.” Whitney’s face drained of color. Her lawyer began quietly packing his briefcase. “I’m not signing anything today,” I said, standing up smoothly. “But you might want to. There’s a plea deal on the table until Friday.” I walked to the door, then turned back. “Oh — and Whitney? David left you something too. It’s in the envelope on the table.” She tore it open with shaking hands. Inside was a single photograph: the two of them as children at the lake house, and on the back, in David’s handwriting, three words. *I saw everything.* I closed the door behind me and finally, finally, I let myself breathe.
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