Widow Signed Away Everything—Then Their Lawyer Went Pale-heuh

Nine days after Daniel Whitaker’s funeral, Mara sat alone at the kitchen table and realised grief had not come to her as a sob.

It had come as paperwork.

The house was quiet in the way houses become quiet after people have stopped visiting.

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At first, after the service, there had been footsteps in the hallway, low voices near the sink, neighbours making tea they did not drink, board members standing stiffly beside the lilies with their hands folded in front of them.

They had all said the same sort of thing.

Daniel was remarkable.

Daniel was generous.

Daniel had vision.

Daniel had built something that would outlast him.

Then their coats went back on, the front door closed, and the words they had left behind began to sour with the flowers.

By the ninth day, the lilies had stopped looking like sympathy and started looking like evidence.

White petals curled brown at the edges.

The water in the vases had turned cloudy.

Their perfume hung in the kitchen, thick and sweet and unpleasant, pressing against the smell of rain on the window and the cold tea Mara had forgotten beside her calculator.

She could have carried the lot out to the bin.

She did not.

Instead, she sat in a black jumper with the sleeves pushed to her elbows, a yellow legal pad in front of her, and Daniel’s business records spread across the table in uneven piles.

There were bank statements.

There were payment schedules.

There were supplier notices folded and refolded by someone who had been pretending a crisis was only an inconvenience.

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