“Maybe we should just elope,” she said, voice trembling just enough to be performative. “Save everyone the trouble. Maybe Kevin and I should start our marriage without this… hostility.”

Kevin’s fingers twitched toward her hand, then stopped. I saw his conflict: the lifelong urge to fix, to please, to smooth. The same urge that made him vulnerable.

I kept my voice steady. “You have seventy-two hours.”

Patricia’s eyes narrowed. “Excuse me?”

“Seventy-two hours,” I said, pulling my phone out and setting a reminder with deliberate calm. “Three days to provide documentation for every dollar you’re requesting. If the wedding truly costs two million, proving it should be simple.”

Vanessa’s mouth opened, closed. Patricia’s voice went sharp. “We don’t have to justify our standards to you.”

“You do if you want my money,” I replied.

I stood, placed two hundred-dollar bills on the table for lunch, and looked at Kevin.

“Son,” I said, soft enough that only he would hear the warmth under the steel, “we’re leaving. I need to speak with you privately.”

Vanessa grabbed his arm. “Kevin, you don’t have to—”

“Yes,” I said quietly, and my voice cut through the room like a gavel. “He does.”