I was under anesthesia when it wore off too early. I couldn’t open my eyes, but I heard my son’s wife tell the surgeon: “If something goes wrong, don’t call her lawyer. Call me first.” – Daily Stories

He walked into my room wearing his old gray suit and an expression that told me immediately he already suspected everything.

I was sitting upright drinking tea.

Vanessa’s smile tightened instantly.

Malcolm kissed my cheek lightly. “You look inconveniently alive.”

“I’m trying new hobbies.”

Vanessa folded her arms. “She’s exhausted.”

“No,” I corrected softly. “She’s dismissed.”

The silence that followed was delicious.

Malcolm placed a folder in my lap.

Inside were forged signatures.

Wire transfers.

Emails between Vanessa and a property developer.

And at the bottom of a legal petition requesting emergency control over my estate sat Daniel’s signature.

My son looked physically sick.

“Mom,” he whispered, “I didn’t understand everything.”

I turned another page slowly. “You understood enough to sign.”

Vanessa stepped forward immediately. “This is ridiculous. Daniel is your heir.”

“He was.”

Her face changed instantly.

Malcolm adjusted his glasses calmly. “Mrs. Whitmore amended her trust six months ago. Daniel receives only a modest annuity, contingent upon taking no legal action against the estate. Vanessa receives absolutely nothing. Every property is locked under the Whitmore Foundation for the next fifty years.”

Vanessa stared at me in disbelief.

“You can’t do that.”

“I already did.”

Her voice sharpened. “You’re old. You’re sick. Courts overturn things.”

“Courts,” Malcolm replied pleasantly, “adore notarized paperwork.”

Then I gave her the sentence she feared most.

“The recorder worked beautifully.”

Every trace of color drained from her face.

Malcolm smiled faintly.

“The hospital board meets Friday,” he said. “I suggest arriving carefully dressed.”

Vanessa arrived in white.

A bold choice for a woman walking into her own downfall.

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