“Sure, Megan,” I said. “Let’s read it.” I unfolded the letter slowly, the way Dad used to unfold his newspaper on Sunday mornings. “Dear Mr. Ellison,” I began. “Per our previous correspondence, I am formally declining the trust distribution outlined in my father’s estate. Please redirect the full balance — three point two million dollars — into the Hannah Reyes Scholarship Foundation, effective immediately.” The champagne flute paused at Megan’s lip. “Keep going,” I said, because she’d gone pale. “The letter you’re holding isn’t a loan request. It’s the cover page of the foundation Dad and I built together before he died. He left the controlling share to me, Megan. Not you. Me. Because he knew.” Her fiancé, Brent — the investment banker she’d paraded for two years — slowly set down his fork. “Knew what?” he asked. I looked at him kindly. “That your firm’s been under SEC review since March. That Megan signed off on the prospectus. And that the trust she promised you as a wedding gift?” I shook my head. “Was never hers to give.” The room didn’t gasp. It exhaled, like forty people had been holding their breath for years and finally remembered they were allowed to. Megan stood up so fast her chair tipped. “You planned this,” she hissed. “No,” I said. “I survived it. There’s a difference.” I folded the letter, set it gently beside her untouched plate, and picked up my purse. At the door, I turned. “Oh — and the dress you mocked? It’s going in the foundation’s first auction catalog. Turns out people pay a lot for the gown the charity case wore the night she stopped being one.” I walked out into the cool spring air. My phone buzzed once. Mr. Ellison. Three words. “He’d be proud.” I finally let myself cry.
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