Stepmother Claimed His £70 Million Estate—Until The Solicitor Laughed-heuh

The conference room looked as though it had been built to make ordinary grief feel underdressed.

The table was long, dark and polished so well that the ceiling lights shone in it like pale coins.

The chairs were leather, the carpet was soft enough to swallow footsteps, and the air held the faint scent of lemon polish, old paper and money that had not needed to hurry for generations.

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Rain ran down the window behind me in thin silver lines.

In the corridor, someone had just made tea.

I could smell it through the gap beneath the door, that familiar British comfort arriving in the wrong place at the wrong time.

My father had been buried four days earlier.

Four days was all it had taken for Elena to start discussing access to the accounts.

She sat opposite me in black, but there was nothing soft or grieving about the way she wore it.

Her dress was expensive, perfectly cut, and chosen with the same cold care she had brought to everything since marrying my father.

Her hair was smooth.

Her nails were immaculate.

Her red lipstick had not smudged once through the funeral, the wake, or the silence afterwards.

She looked like a woman waiting for a door to open.

Not the door to memory.

The door to money.

Beside her, Brad was slumped in a chair with sunglasses on indoors, one ankle resting on his knee as he scrolled through sports cars on his phone.

He was not my brother, not by blood and not by choice, though Elena had spent years insisting we were all family whenever it benefited her.

“The red one,” he said, turning the screen towards her. “I’m serious. It pops. They’ll only hold it until Friday, so we need the funds released today.”

Elena patted his wrist without looking properly at the phone.

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