“What’s that, Mother?” Chelsea asked, still smiling like she’d already won. I slid the envelope toward Kevin, because Kevin was the one who’d been whispering to her for months. “Open it, sweetheart. You’ve earned a look.” Kevin’s fingers trembled a little as he pulled out the pages. His face went the color of the tablecloth. Brianna leaned over, read one line, and hissed, “Kevin, what is this?” I took a slow sip of water. “That,” I said, “is the forensic accounting report I commissioned after I noticed forty-one thousand dollars had quietly disappeared from your father’s memorial trust. The trust I’m the sole trustee of. The one you’ve been forging my signature on since April.” The table went dead silent. A waiter drifting toward us actually turned around. Chelsea’s smile cracked. “Mom — Mom, wait, there’s an explanation—” “There is,” I agreed. “It’s called wire fraud. The second envelope, the one still in my purse, is from my attorney. He advised me to give you both a choice tonight. Option one: Kevin repays every cent within ninety days, with interest, and signs a notarized confession I keep in a safety deposit box for the rest of my life. Option two: I walk out of here, drive to the precinct where your father’s old partner is now a captain, and let the district attorney decide how capable I am of managing things.” Kevin started crying. Actually crying, into his linguine. Chelsea turned on him — “You told me she wouldn’t notice!” — and just like that, the golden boy and the sharp-tongued daughter tore each other apart in front of the whole restaurant. I stood up, left two twenties for my half of the meal, and walked out into the cold October air. The house went on the market the next morning. Not to Kevin. To a lovely young teacher and her husband who cried when I handed them the keys. I moved into a little blue cottage by the water, adopted a rescue spaniel named Walter, and started painting again for the first time in thirty years. Chelsea still calls. I let it go to voicemail. Turns out the quiet widow was capable of quite a lot.”
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