“I spoke to Julian’s lawyers this morning, Eleanor,” Beatrice spat, the venom in her voice practically echoing in the grand foyer. “The preliminary reading of the estate is clear. As his mother, and given the… circumstances of his sudden passing, I am taking immediate control of the properties to secure the legacy of the Vance name.”
She pointed a shaking, diamond-ringed finger directly at my face.
“All the assets belong to my son,” Beatrice sneered, her voice rising in pitch. “The house, the cars, the company accounts. I’m taking everything. I am making absolutely sure that my true, male heir—Julian’s son—is provided for.” She gestured lovingly toward Chloe’s stomach, then turned her cold, dead eyes back to me. “Just take that useless daughter of yours, pack a bag, and leave my house.”
Chloe smirked. It was a slow, sickeningly arrogant expression. She patted her belly again, looking around the opulent foyer as if mentally redecorating it. She thought she had won the lottery. She thought she had successfully stolen a titan of industry from his boring, pragmatic wife.
I didn’t scream. I didn’t burst into hysterical, heartbroken tears. I didn’t beg to stay in the home I had meticulously managed for a decade.
I looked at Beatrice. Then I looked at Chloe.
My eyes, which Julian had always complained were too analytical, turned as cold, flat, and absolute as a frozen lake in the dead of winter. The rage in my chest didn’t explode; it crystallized into something incredibly focused and deeply, terrifyingly silent.
“Okay,” I said softly.
The single word hung in the air, incredibly loud in its quietness.
Beatrice blinked, momentarily thrown off balance by my total lack of resistance. She had wanted a screaming match. She had wanted to physically throw me out to assert her dominance.
I didn’t give her the satisfaction. I tightened my grip on Lily’s hand, picked up the single, small duffel bag I had packed an hour ago, and turned my back on them.
I walked out the heavy front doors, pulling them shut with a quiet, definitive click, leaving the gloating, triumphant women behind in their stolen castle.
I buckled Lily into the back seat of my unassuming, reliable sedan. As I sat in the driver’s seat, the engine idling in the cool evening air, I reached into my purse and pulled out my phone.
I unlocked a hidden, heavily encrypted financial dossier application.