Caleb zoomed his camera closer while Marissa smiled proudly into the livestream. “My husband left me everything,” she announced for the guests to hear. “The house, the accounts, the company shares. Lily gets memories. Maybe the broom too, if she behaves.” Laughter spread through the room because confidence makes weak people feel safe. Then the doorbell rang, cutting through the noise so sharply the entire house seemed to freeze.
“That must be Mr. Voss,” Marissa said smugly as she walked toward the foyer. She moved like a woman approaching her throne. But the moment Adrian Voss entered beside a private security officer and a court-appointed estate witness, her expression cracked. Mr. Voss barely acknowledged her. Instead, he looked directly at me. “Mr. Hale anticipated resistance,” he said calmly. Even Caleb slowly lowered his phone after hearing those words.
Mr. Voss opened his briefcase and placed a thick folder beside a tablet on the dining table. “I will now read the final will of Richard Elias Hale,” he announced. Marissa’s confidence vanished when he explained the will had been signed, witnessed, notarized, and video-recorded eleven days before my father’s death. “Video-recorded?” she repeated weakly. Fear flashed across her face so quickly most people missed it. I didn’t.
The video began playing. My father appeared on the screen looking weaker than before, but his eyes were still sharp enough to cut through lies. “If you are watching this,” he began slowly, “then my daughter has probably been underestimated.” My chest tightened painfully. He explained that during his final months he had been pressured to alter his estate plans, isolated from people he trusted, and repeatedly manipulated into believing I only cared about money. Then he looked straight into the camera and said the words that shattered the room completely. “She found everything-