Caroline laughed the way rich women laugh when they think they’ve already won. “Read it, scribble it, frame it. Just sign.” Tucker leaned against the bookshelf, scrolling his phone, smirking. I turned page one. Page two. Page seven. The clause was buried where she expected my eyes to glaze, transferring my forty-nine percent of Beaumont Hospitality to a shell company in Delaware. Cute. I set the pen down. “Caroline, can I ask you something? Did Dad ever show you the safe behind the Monet?” Her smile flickered. “There’s no safe behind the Monet.” “Exactly,” I said. “It’s behind the Rothko. He moved it the week he married you.” I pulled a manila folder from under my chair. Inside: the original trust, dated four years before her wedding, naming me sole successor trustee of the Beaumont holdings the moment any party attempted to coerce a transfer of my shares. I slid it across the marble. “You just triggered it. About forty seconds ago. On camera.” I nodded toward the brass owl on the mantle. Her father had given it to my dad as a housewarming gift. Dad had laughed and gutted it and put a lens inside the same afternoon. “He never trusted your family,” I said softly. “He loved you. But he never trusted you.” Tucker’s phone hit the floor. Caroline stood so fast her chair scraped. “You little—” “Ms. Beaumont,” came a voice from the doorway. Our family attorney, Henry, stepped in with two associates. “I’ll need you and your son to vacate the residence by Friday. The board has been notified. The Dallas, Houston, and Savannah properties will be under Miss Beaumont’s direct management effective tomorrow morning.” I folded the unsigned contract into a neat little square. “You were right about one thing,” I told her, standing. “I am a dropout. I dropped out of Yale Law in my final semester to come home and take care of my dying father. He left me everything else, including the part of him that knew exactly who you were.” I walked past her, past Tucker, past twenty-three years of being called quiet. At the doorway I turned. “Tea’s still hot, Caroline. Pour yourself a cup. It’s the last thing in this house that still belongs to you.”
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