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“And the proposal?”
“That part was just for my enjoyment.”
My stepmother tapped the folder.
I looked down at the papers. Then I looked up at the woman who’d spent 20 years calling me ungrateful for inheriting my own mother’s home.
“You paid a teenage boy to date me?”
I let her have that moment. I let Aaron pick up the pen and click it open, ready to coach me through where to sign.
Then I picked up my phone from the table, clicked a couple of things, and set it on the counter, screen up.
“Forty-seven minutes,” I said. “It started the second I heard your voice through the bedroom door, Aaron. Before I ever walked back to pour the wine. I heard your call in the bedroom, and I recorded every word she just said. I just sent a copy of the conversation to a trusted source.”
Diane’s smile froze halfway up her cheek.
“Oh, and one more thing.”
I reached into the drawer beneath the silverware and pulled out a thin envelope I’d been keeping under the takeout menus for three months.
Aaron’s pen had stopped clicking.
“Mr. Whitfield says hello.”
“But the trust was restructured, anyway. I’m the sole signatory, and it was independently witnessed. The house was never going to be yours, Aaron. Not even for a minute,” I told him.
Diane’s mouth opened, but nothing came out.
“You,” I said, turning to her, “have been paying him to guard a door that was already locked.”
Aaron set the pen down very carefully, as if it might bite him.
“Sandra,” he started. “Baby, listen.”
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