Megan turned on him. “Tell them what you promised me. You said you’d inherit everything.”
“Not now,” he hissed.
“When then?” she shot back.
Whitmore cleared his throat.
“We can proceed with the remaining provisions.”
I looked at him. “As trustee, can I request an immediate financial review and freeze discretionary spending?”
“Yes,” he said.
“You can’t freeze anything,” Daniel snapped. “It’s my company.”
“Not anymore,” Whitmore replied calmly.
That was when reality finally reached him.
The stage he had always controlled was gone.
He turned to me, desperation turning into anger.
“If you do this, I’ll fight you. I’ll drag it out and make your life miserable.”
My heart thudded once.
The old version of me might have backed down.
But Evelyn’s words echoed in my mind: Stop believing you’re powerless.
“I’m already miserable,” I said quietly. “You’re just the reason.”
I stood up, removed my wedding ring, and placed it on the table.
Under the bright lights it looked small—almost meaningless.
Daniel stared at it as if all the air had left the room.
Megan stared too.
“I’ll call Ms. Shaw today,” I told Whitmore.
He nodded and stood.
As I walked toward the door, Daniel’s voice cracked behind me.
“Rachel… please.”