“This property is worth tens of millions now. Perhaps more, depending on the survey results. You are a schoolteacher from Minnesota, Catherine. We’re offering to save you from a legal and financial situation that will become unmanageable very quickly.”
There are moments when someone tells you exactly how they see you, and the insult in it is almost secondary to the gift of clarity. A schoolteacher. As if the phrase itself disqualified me from strategy. As if a life spent reading motive and contradiction and buried meaning in text had somehow made me naive rather than dangerous.
I smiled.
“My husband,” I said, “did not spend the last years of his life building this place only to leave it to men who suddenly discovered family values after an oil strike.”
Robert’s expression hardened.
Jenna turned to me with visible frustration. “Why are you being like this?”
Like this. Defensive. Difficult. Emotional. Female. Protective. Inconvenient.
Before I could answer, Ellis appeared in the doorway from the back hall.
“Everything all right, Mrs. Mitchell?”
Robert pivoted toward him with the impatience of a man unaccustomed to staff having names. “This is a family matter.”