Stepmother Said He’d Get Nothing — Then The Solicitor Laughed-heuh

My stepmother smiled at my father’s will reading as if grief had been a dress code she had satisfied by wearing black.

The conference room at the solicitor’s office was warm, polished, and airless, with rain ticking faintly against the glass and a tea mug cooling untouched near the corner of the desk.

Everything smelt of leather files, lemon polish, damp coats, and old money that had learned to keep its voice down.

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I sat at the far end of the table with my hands folded in my lap.

I kept my eyes on the grain of the wood because it was easier than looking at the woman across from me.

My father, Owen Watson, had been buried four days earlier.

Four days.

Sylvia was already acting as if the mourning period were an irritating delay in the release of funds.

She wore a black dress, but it did not feel like grief.

It felt chosen.

Her hair had been arranged with care, her lipstick was perfect, and there was not a crease in her expression except the one she used when pretending to be patient with people beneath her.

Beside her sat Jasper, her son, wearing sunglasses indoors like the room itself was lucky to host him.

He was scrolling through pictures of cars on his phone, tilting the screen towards Sylvia as if my father’s death had finally opened the showroom doors.

“The red one,” he said, loudly enough for everyone to hear. “I’m telling you, Mum, the red one looks serious. They’ll hold it until Friday, but we need to move funds today.”

Sylvia touched his wrist with two polished fingers.

“We’ll handle it, darling. Let’s just get through the formalities.”

The word settled on the table between us.

Formalities.

That was my father’s life to her now.

A small administrative obstacle between the funeral and whatever she intended to buy first.

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