She thought my grief had made me weak until Richard’s attorney opened the file she never knew existed-yumihong

The windshield wipers dragged two crooked lines across the rain while I sat at the curb and watched the color leave Caroline’s face.

She was still in my doorway, phone pressed to her ear, one hand braced against the frame like the house itself had shifted under her feet. The brass porch light caught the diamond on her finger every time she moved. My own phone was warm against my ear.

“Stay where you are, Mrs. Bishop,” Daniel Mercer said. His voice was flat in the way good attorneys save for emergencies. “Do not go back inside. I’m sending Lisa and a deputy. If anyone tries to remove paperwork, they need to see it happen.”

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A lawn mower droned somewhere down the block, absurdly ordinary. Rain tapped the hood of my Honda. In my lap sat the manila folder Caroline had pushed across my counter. The forged signature stared up at me from the top page, my name tilted too hard to the right, the way mine never had.

Fourteen minutes later, a dark gray SUV turned the corner and stopped behind me. Lisa Monroe got out first, umbrella tucked under one arm, black coat buttoned to her throat, her leather briefcase already in her hand. Deputy Keller stepped out from the passenger side, broad-shouldered, rain darkening his tan uniform across one sleeve before he even reached the porch.

Greg’s black F-150 came in hot behind them and stopped so hard the front end dipped.

He jumped out before the engine fully died.

“What the hell is this?” he said.

His loafers splashed through the shallow water along the curb. He still had on the navy quarter-zip he wore whenever he wanted to look like a man other people trusted with money.

Lisa did not break stride.

“That depends on what’s in the house,” she said.

By the time I reached the porch, Caroline had stepped back inside. Not out of courtesy. Out of instinct. Predators retreat when they hear an unfamiliar voice they can’t charm.

The kitchen smelled like cold chicken and wet wool. The dishwasher had stopped, leaving the room unnaturally still. My purse was where I had left it on the passenger seat, strap creased from my grip. The folder now sat on the counter beside the bowl of lemons, exactly where Caroline had placed it when she told me I would just have to manage the payments.

Deputy Keller nodded toward it. “Nobody touches that until I photograph it.”

Greg gave a short laugh through his nose.

“This is insane. Eleanor knows we were helping family.”

I looked at him then, really looked. At the easy flush climbing his neck. At the expensive watch that had somehow survived three ruined companies. At the way he said helping family as if theft became noble when a son-in-law wore loafers.

“I know exactly what you were helping yourselves to,” I said.

Caroline folded her arms. “Mom, don’t turn this into a spectacle.”

Spectacle.

My husband had been dead for three days.

The house was quiet in all the wrong places. Richard’s coffee mug still sat upside down on the drying mat because I had not yet been able to put it away. His reading glasses were on the windowsill over the sink, one temple slightly bent. His sweater still hung on the mudroom hook where I had dropped it after bringing home his last overnight bag from the hospital.

And my daughter was standing in my kitchen asking me not to make a spectacle.

Lisa held out her hand. “Mrs. Bishop, the study key?”

I reached into my purse and gave it to her.

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