She Auctioned Her Sister And Nephew At A Wedding — Then Their Father’s Attorney Asked For The Screen-olive

The blue glow from the ballroom screen washed over Victoria’s white dress and turned her face the color of skim milk.

For three seconds, nobody moved.

The band sat frozen behind their instruments. A waiter held a tray of champagne flutes so still the bubbles looked trapped. Somewhere near the back, a woman whispered, “Oh my God,” and the words carried because the room had gone silent enough to hear the ice shifting in water glasses.

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James Morrison did not raise his voice.

He didn’t have to.

“Mrs. Hamilton,” he said, turning toward the groom’s mother first, “you may want your family seated for this.”

Richard Hamilton, still in his black tuxedo, looked from Victoria to my mother, then to the sealed envelope in James’s hand. His face carried the confused stiffness of a man realizing the joke at his wedding was not a joke at all.

Victoria stepped forward.

“This is ridiculous,” she said. Her voice was sweet, but her fingers crushed the microphone stem. “He’s nobody. Eleanor probably hired him for attention.”

I felt Noah’s small body press against my side. His tears had quieted, but his breathing came in little sharp pulls.

James looked at me.

“Eleanor,” he said, softer now, “I am sorry. Your father requested that this be done publicly only if Martha and Victoria created a public injury first.”

My mother’s mouth opened.

James turned back to the room.

“They did.”

A hotel employee connected a laptop near the stage. The screen flashed once, then displayed a scanned legal document with my father’s full name at the top.

WILLIAM ROBERT GRIFFIN — FINAL WILL AND TESTAMENT.

The date beneath it read April 15, 2019.

Three years before my father died.

My mother took a step backward.

“No,” she said.

James removed a pair of reading glasses from his pocket and unfolded the first page.

“To my daughter, Eleanor Griffin, and to my grandson, Noah David Griffin, I leave eighty-five percent of my personal estate, all controlling shares of Griffin Real Estate Holdings, and full authority over the Griffin Family Trust.”

The room cracked open into whispers.

Noah looked up at me.

“Mommy?”

I could not answer. My hand had locked around the back of his suit jacket.

James continued.

“To my wife, Martha Griffin, I leave fifteen percent of liquid assets for reasonable living support, under supervision of the trustee, contingent upon no further interference with Eleanor or Noah.”

Victoria’s groom stood slowly.

“Contingent?” Richard asked.

James looked directly at him.

“Yes.”

My mother’s pearls trembled against her throat.

“You can’t do this,” she snapped. “William’s estate was settled. Carter and Smith handled it.”

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