“Avery,” she said, shaking my hand. “I’m sorry for the circumstances.”
“Thank you.”
She sat across from me beside Jerome.
“I knew Evelyn for twenty-nine years,” Margaret said. “She was not sentimental in legal matters. If she included your name in that condition, she had a reason.”
I folded my hands in my lap. “I’m still trying to understand that reason.”
Margaret opened her folder. “Evelyn believed Scott had developed a habit of attaching himself to people when he needed something, then resenting them once they had served their purpose.”
The sentence landed quietly, but it landed deep.
“She said that?” I asked.
“Many times.”
I looked down.
Margaret’s voice softened. “She also believed you had been patient with him in ways no one else had.”
“That doesn’t feel like something worth rewarding.”
“It was not a reward,” Margaret said. “It was a safeguard.”
“For me?”
“For you. And perhaps for Scott, though he may never understand that.”
I almost laughed, but the sound caught in my throat. “A safeguard that trapped me in a marriage?”
“No,” Margaret said firmly. “The will does not require you to stay married. It gives you leverage if Scott tries to profit from harming you.”
For the first time, the condition felt different.
Not a chain.
A handrail.
Margaret removed another document. “There is also a personal letter from Evelyn to you. I was instructed to deliver it only if Scott initiated divorce proceedings within the twelve-month period.”
My pulse quickened.
She slid the sealed envelope across the table.
This one was thicker than the first.
My name was written on the front in Evelyn’s careful script.
I did not open it immediately. Something about the envelope felt too private for a conference room.
“May I read it later?” I asked.
“Of course,” Margaret said.
Then she looked at Jerome. “As trustee, I am freezing all major distributions to Scott until the probate court reviews his compliance. He will receive a modest monthly allowance from liquid funds already released, but no property transfers, no investment control, and no access to the lake house.”
“The lake house,” I said. “Why does that matter?”
Margaret’s expression became unreadable.
“Because Scott has already attempted to sell it.”
Jerome sat straighter. “Without title?”
“With a promise of future title.” Margaret’s mouth tightened. “To Kayla Jensen’s father.”
The room seemed to tilt.
I blinked. “Her father?”
Margaret nodded. “For well below market value.”
Jerome muttered something under his breath that sounded like a prayer for patience.
I stared at the envelope in my hands.
Scott had not just planned to leave me. He had started trading pieces of Evelyn’s estate before he fully owned them.
And Kayla’s family was involved.
That evening, I sat alone in Rachel’s bedroom while she worked late at the hospital. Rain tapped softly against the window. The city below blurred into red taillights and wet pavement.
I opened Evelyn’s second letter.
Dear Avery,
If you are reading this, then Scott has done what I feared he might do.
I am sorry.
Not because you failed him. Not because you should have prevented it. But because being proven right about someone you love is a lonely kind of grief.
I will not ask you to forgive him. I will not ask you to punish him. Both choices belong only to you.
What I ask is that you protect the truth.
There are things Scott does not know about my estate because I did not trust him with them. There are things he thinks belong to him because he has always confused expectation with ownership.
The lake house is one of them.
He remembers it as a place he visited as a child. He does not remember who paid the taxes when his father disappeared for months. He does not remember the woman who kept that family standing when the men in it mistook charm for character.
You will hear many stories now. Some will be polished. Some will be desperate. Listen carefully to the details people leave out.