I reached into my purse and pulled out a slim manila envelope I’d been carrying for three weeks. I slid it across the white tablecloth, right past the wine glasses, and said, “Funny you mention the house, Marcus. I had some paperwork drawn up too.” He opened it with that smug little grin, the one Trent was already mirroring. The grin died on the second page. Because it wasn’t a deed transfer. It was a forensic accounting report. Forty-six pages of it. See, six months ago my dad’s old attorney called me about a routine title check and noticed something strange: Marcus had been quietly refinancing my inherited property — forging my signature with a notary stamp belonging to Trent’s girlfriend, who worked at a credit union in Plano. They’d pulled almost two hundred thousand in equity and funneled it into Trent’s failing landscaping business. My name. My house. My father’s legacy. Marcus’s face went the color of the tablecloth. Trent stood up so fast his chair hit the floor. I didn’t raise my voice. I just slid the second envelope across — a courtesy copy of the criminal complaint already filed that morning with the Collin County DA. “The detective said you’ll probably get a call tomorrow,” I told him, sipping my water. “I asked him to wait until after dessert. I wanted you to enjoy the ribeye.” Marcus started stammering about how we could fix this, how it was a misunderstanding, how the kids needed their father. I stood up, smoothed my navy dress, and dropped my wedding ring into his half-empty wine glass. It sank to the bottom with a soft, final clink. “The kids will be just fine,” I said. “They’ve got their mother. And their grandfather’s house. Free and clear — I had the fraudulent lien voided last Tuesday.” I walked out past the staring couple, past the maître d’, into the cool Dallas night. My mother was waiting in the car with both babies buckled in the back, already asleep. She looked at my empty ring finger and just nodded once. We drove home. To my house. The one Daddy built.
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