After he hung up, he laughed. But I never forgot that laugh—it wasn’t confident. It was nervous.
So when she passed, the family arrived at the funeral like vultures in black. Hugs, tears, practiced grief. My father gripped my arm as we sat in the front row.
“Stay quiet,” he whispered. “Let the lawyer handle it.”
My father forced a smile that didn’t reach his eyes.
Then the lawyer turned to me, handing over a wax-sealed envelope that felt heavier than it should.
“Ms. Sterling,” he said, voice steady, “you are the primary beneficiary of Ms. Sterling’s estate, valued at roughly eighty-nine million dollars.”
Gasps rippled through the room. Cousins stared. Uncle’s eyes widened. Stepmother clutched her chest. My father squeezed my arm—a warning.
Then the lawyer added, “However, the will requires that you read this envelope aloud at the funeral.”
A different silence fell. My father muttered, “That’s… unnecessary.”
I looked at him and saw something I hadn’t dared to notice before: fear. Not of losing money—but of what my aunt had left me besides it.
I broke the seal.
I unfolded the letter. I read the first line. My heart froze.
It wasn’t a gift.Continue reading…