Carla was a woman composed entirely of sharp angles, expensive Botox, and a sociopathic, predatory greed. She was dressed in a sharp, tailored gray power blazer, her hair flawlessly blown out. She hadn’t shed a single tear at her oldest son’s funeral. She hadn’t hugged me. And today, she hadn’t even bothered to ask how her three-year-old granddaughter, Maya, was coping with the sudden loss of her father.
She was not here to mourn. She was here to execute a hostile takeover.
“Joel’s law firm was built entirely on my initial capital, Miriam,” Carla stated. Her voice wasn’t laced with sorrow; it sounded like grinding gravel—cold, abrasive, and unyielding. “The three-hundred-thousand-dollar downpayment on this house? That was mine. The firm’s foundation, the client list, the prestige of the Fredel name—all mine.”
I stared at her, my throat raw. “Carla, Joel just died. The funeral was four days ago. Why are you doing this right now?”
Carla didn’t flinch. She picked up a silver spoon and meticulously aligned it with the edge of a placemat.