“Because grief does not pause commerce,” Carla snapped, her dark eyes locking onto mine with chilling intensity. “I am a businesswoman. I am here to reclaim my dividends. I am here to secure my son’s legacy before you mismanage it.”
She reached into her designer leather tote bag and pulled out a thick, aggressively drafted legal folder, dropping it onto the marble island with a heavy thwack.
“Here is the reality of your situation, Miriam,” Carla said, leaning forward, resting her manicured hands on the granite. “You are a stay-at-home mother with a degree in art history. You have absolutely no capacity to manage a high-stakes corporate law firm that generates over six hundred and twenty thousand dollars in annual revenue. You cannot afford the upkeep on a two-million-dollar estate.”
She tapped the folder with a sharp, acrylic nail.
“You will sign the ‘Assumption of Estate’ paperwork. You will formally relinquish all claims to the house, the law firm, and the primary estate bank accounts to me. In exchange, I won’t drag you through a humiliating, years-long probate battle that will drain whatever meager savings you have left.”