Three weeks in, my father knocked on my bedroom door after midnight.
He sat in the chair by the window and looked older than I had ever seen him.
“This should not have happened,” he said.
“No,” I replied.
He admitted Miranda told him it was a visit. He admitted she handled his paperwork after his recovery. I handed him the documents Nathan had compiled. He read them and went pale.
“She said it was estate simplification,” he murmured.
“It was access,” I said.
He looked at me and finally said the one sentence I had waited years to hear.
“I should have protected you from her.”
“Yes,” I said. “You should have.”
Then he asked, “What do you need from me?”
“A sworn affidavit,” I said.
He signed it.
Once he did, the whole thing stopped being suspicion and became a case.
The foundation board reviewed the reports. The gala award was quietly revoked pending ethics review. Judge Eleanor Brooks, chair of the gala committee, requested a confidential meeting with me. She was precise, unsentimental, impossible to impress. After reading the file, she asked, “What do you want?”
“The truth in the room she built her reputation for,” I said.
She nodded. “Then attend the gala. Bring a sealed envelope.”