Stepmom Opened Her Mother’s Day Gift And Found The Stolen Proof-eirian

I was sixteen years old when I learned that the right gift could do what three years of crying, begging, and trying to be good never had.

It could make my stepmother afraid.

Cassandra Bennett believed in beautiful surfaces, so I gave her one.

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The package was wrapped in silver paper, tied with a pale ribbon, and placed beside her vanity on Mother’s Day morning while white peonies opened in glass vases downstairs.

The house smelled of cut flowers, chilled champagne, and the sharp citrus cleaner Cassandra made the staff use before guests arrived.

She had planned the party down to the last napkin fold.

Thirty guests were expected by noon.

The caterers were arranging miniature crab cakes on silver trays, florists were correcting stems by the terrace doors, and my father, Thomas Bennett, kept telling everyone how proud he was of Cassandra for creating such a warm home.

Warm was not the word I would have used.

A home is not warm because the candles are expensive.

A home is warm because a child can cry in it without wondering who will use the tears against her.

My mother, Catherine Whitmore Bennett, had made our house warm long before Cassandra ever set a pale heel on the marble entry floor.

Mom grew rosemary along the back fence, kept tomato plants in the vegetable garden, and labeled pantry jars in her own handwriting because she said order should still have a human hand in it.

She wore gardening gloves with holes in the fingers and forgot half the songs she hummed while cooking.

She was also one of the sharpest people at Whitmore Capital, the private wealth and asset management firm her family had built over three generations.

People underestimated her because she smiled easily and remembered birthdays.

They usually made that mistake only once.

My father entered Whitmore Capital as a promising adviser with clean ambition and a smile that made older men want to mentor him.

Mom did more than marry him.

She advocated for him, trained him, defended his instincts in boardrooms where some people still called him the outsider who had married into a legacy.

When I was little, I thought that was romance.

I thought love meant two people standing on the same side of the table.

Then Mom got sick.

At first, it sounded almost ordinary.

Headaches.

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