“Okay,” I said. “Let’s talk about the house.” Daniel’s shoulders relaxed. Kyle actually chuckled. They thought I was folding. I reached into my tote bag and pulled out a slim navy folder I’d been carrying around for two weeks, ever since the private investigator handed it to me in a Panera parking lot. I slid it across the granite. “Before you call your lawyer, Daniel, you should probably read page four.” His smile flickered. He opened it. Photographs. Hotel receipts. A lease agreement, in his name and Kyle’s name together, for a condo in Scottsdale I had never heard of, paid for out of a joint account he didn’t know I’d been quietly auditing since March. “The house was never marital property,” I said. “My attorney filed the paperwork last Friday. It’s held in a trust now, in my mother’s name. You can sue. You’ll lose. But that’s not the fun part.” Kyle’s face had gone the color of old milk. “The fun part,” I continued, “is that the condo you two have been using? The one where you’ve been entertaining your assistant, Daniel? I forwarded everything in that folder to your father this morning at 6 a.m. You know, the father whose company you’re supposed to inherit. The one who put a morality clause in the trust in 2019.” Daniel sat down slowly on a barstool, like his knees had simply quit. “He called me back at 6:14,” I said. “He’s flying in tonight. He’d like his keys back. Both sets.” I picked up my coffee, walked past them, and opened the front door. “You have until noon. Leave the cashmere. I paid for it.” I went upstairs, drew a bath, and for the first time in four years, I locked the bedroom door behind me and slept like a woman who finally remembered her own name.
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