“As you wish.”
At eleven, Brenda helped me get dressed. I put on a lavender dress I had always liked, combed my hair, even put on a little makeup.
Mark and Rachel thought it was my final vanity, my wish to look presentable in my last hours.
They didn’t know it was my war armor.
When I walked down the stairs, leaning on Brenda, I saw the living room was already set up. Mark had placed chairs in a circle, like an anticipated wake.
How appropriate.
I sat in my favorite armchair—the same one where I had spent thousands of nights reading, planning my businesses, building my empire.
Michael arrived exactly at noon. My younger brother, fifty-eight years old, rushed in with tears in his eyes.
“Helen, sis. I came as fast as I could. How are you?”
“I’m fine, Michael,” I said. “Better than I expected.”
I gave his hand a significant squeeze. He understood that something was going on.
Mark greeted his uncle coldly. They had never gotten along. Michael had always seen through Mark’s lies.
“Who else is coming?” Rachel asked, nervous to see this was getting bigger than they expected.
“My attorney, Sarah,” I said, “and some people who need to be present.”
“Your attorney for what?” Rachel asked.
“For the reading of my will, Rachel,” I said. “I thought you’d like to hear it before I die, so there are no surprises.”
I saw Mark and Rachel exchange nervous glances. This made them anxious, but they couldn’t refuse without raising suspicion.
At twelve-thirty, Sarah arrived with her briefcase. Behind her walked the three notaries, the two attorney witnesses, and finally the two detectives.
Mark immediately stood up.
“What’s going on here? Why are there police?”
“Sit down, Mark,” I said in a firm voice.
Gone was the weak, dying voice. My real voice—strong, clear.
“Mom, what?”
“I said sit down.”
Something in my tone made him obey.
Rachel clung to his arm, pale.
Sarah positioned herself at the front of the room.
“Good morning, everyone,” she said. “We are here for several urgent legal matters concerning Ms. Helen Harrison and her estate.”
“I don’t understand,” Mark stammered. “Mom, you said you were going to die today. The doctor said you had hours left.”
I slowly stood up. Brenda offered to help, but I waved her off.
I walked toward Mark, each step firm, every movement showing I was not dying at all.
“The doctor exaggerated my condition,” I said. “Mark, yes, I had a serious accident. Yes, I was in danger, but I am not dying. At least not in the next few days. I probably have months—maybe more.”
Mark’s face lost all color.
“But… but the doctor said—”
“Dr. Henry is my friend of thirty years,” I said. “He helped me see your true face—the face you showed when you smiled hearing I only had three days to live.”
“I didn’t,” Mark insisted. “Mom, you’re confused. I was in shock. I didn’t know how to react.”
“In shock?” I said. “Is that why you told Rachel she’s finally going to die? All her money will be ours?”
Rachel let out a gasp.
“You… you heard us?”
“I heard everything, Rachel—every conversation, every plan, every cruel word you said, thinking I was too weak to realize.”
Sarah pressed a button on her laptop. On the large TV screen that Mark had bought with my stolen money, the video began to play.
Mark and Rachel’s voices filled the room.
“It’s finally happening, Mom. All your money will be mine and Rachel’s. It’s about time.”
“Seven million, honey. Seven million. We are rich. Officially rich.”
“Let’s toast to her imminent death and our permanent freedom.”
Mark jumped to his feet.
“Turn that off! You don’t have the right to record private conversations.”
“In my own home, I have every right,” I replied coldly. “And this is only the beginning.”
Sarah played the next video—Mark talking to the appraiser, evaluating my possessions while I was supposedly agonizing. Then the conversations about Frank, the murder plot, the promised payments.
Michael watched with growing horror. The notaries took notes. The detectives recorded Mark and Rachel’s every reaction.
“This… this is a misunderstanding,” Mark tried to explain. “We were joking. The stress made us say things we didn’t mean.”
“Joking?” Sarah pulled out a thick folder. “Were you also joking when you stole three hundred and twenty thousand dollars from your mother’s accounts over the last two years?”
The silence in the room was absolute.
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