Friday came. Vanessa arrived in a cream blazer with her lawyer, a man who smelled like cologne and contempt. She’d already invited her husband Mark — Daniel’s older brother — and their mother Diane, who dabbed fake tears into a monogrammed handkerchief. ‘We just want what’s fair, Claire,’ Diane cooed. ‘Daniel would’ve wanted family taken care of.’ I nodded and slid a manila folder across the table. Vanessa snatched it, expecting a deed. Instead she found printouts. Bank transfers. Forty-seven thousand dollars siphoned from Daniel’s medical fund over four months, routed through a shell account in her name. Screenshots of her texts to Mark: ‘Once he’s gone she’ll crack. The house is basically ours.’ A recording, tinny but clear, of last Tuesday’s wine-soaked threat about my children. Her lawyer set down his pen very slowly. ‘Vanessa,’ he said, ‘I need to step outside.’ I opened the second folder. ‘Daniel knew,’ I told her. ‘He figured it out in month three. He didn’t confront you because he wanted me to have proof, not a fight.’ I turned to Mark, who had gone the color of old paper. ‘He left you a letter. I’ll mail it. The short version is the trust he set up for your daughter’s college is still intact — in my name as trustee. Behave, and Lily goes to whatever school she wants. Sue me, and every cent funds a scholarship for someone else’s kid.’ Diane started to speak. I lifted one finger. ‘The detective handling the fund theft is named Reyes. She’s expecting your call by Monday, or mine.’ Vanessa’s wine glass trembled against the table. ‘You wouldn’t,’ she whispered. I stood up, walked to the mantel, and straightened the lilies Daniel had ordered for me before he died — a standing weekly delivery, paid two years in advance, because he knew I’d forget to buy myself flowers. ‘My husband spent his last clear afternoon protecting his sons from you,’ I said. ‘Don’t ever mistake quiet for weak again.’ They were out of my house in eleven minutes. The boys slept through all of it. Upstairs, I kissed their foreheads and finally, finally, let myself cry.
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