My Ex Brought His Mistress to the Will Reading—Then His Father Named Me-yumihong

I walked into the notary’s office already knowing exactly who would be there.

Adrian Whitlock was leaning back in one of the leather chairs as if he owned the room.

Lillian stood beside him in a fitted cream dress, one hand resting lightly on the table, her expression composed in that way women practice when they believe the ending is already theirs.

Eleanor Whitlock, Adrian’s mother, sat rigidly near the window, gloved hands folded over a black handbag, eyes sharp and cold.

The room smelled faintly of paper, coffee, and old money.

The moment I stepped in, all three of them looked at me.

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No warmth. No surprise. Just irritation that I had actually come.

I did not sit down.

I closed the door behind me and remained standing with my arms crossed, the way a person stands when she knows the air itself is hostile.

My pulse was loud enough that I could feel it behind my ears.

At the head of the table, Leonard Harris, the notary handling Samuel Whitlock’s estate, adjusted his glasses and looked at me over the folder in front of him.

“Ms. Rowan,” he said in his calm, measured voice, “I’m glad you came.”

I gave a small, humorless nod.

“I wasn’t given much choice.”

“That’s true,” he replied. “But you will be shortly.”

Those words slid into the room like a blade.

Adrian exhaled impatiently. “Emily, just sit down so we can get this over with.”

“I’m comfortable standing,” I said.

Eleanor clicked her tongue. “Still dramatic, I see.”

I turned my head and looked at her properly for the first time that morning.

Even after everything, she had the same expression she had worn the day Adrian and I got married: polite contempt, wrapped in silk and perfume.

Eleanor never raised her voice when a whisper would wound more efficiently.

During my marriage, she had corrected my posture, my tone, my clothes, my taste in furniture, even the way I folded napkins at dinner.

It was one of her gifts—turning ordinary moments into quiet humiliations.

But I was no longer her daughter-in-law.

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