Dad slammed his palm on the table. “Enough!”
The judge snapped, “Mr. Vale, control yourself.”
That was when I knew something was wrong. Not with my father. With the judge. His irritation was not aimed at Dad’s outburst. It was panic. I had seen Judge Halpern’s name before, not on court documents, but inside a vendor list.
Harbor Meridian Compliance.
A consulting firm paid four hundred and sixty thousand dollars over eighteen months for “risk review.” No website. No staff. Just invoices, approved by my father, routed through a Wyoming LLC.
My mother had circled the name in red ink on the drive.
LENA, FIND WHO OWNS THIS.
I had.
The owner was a trust. The beneficiary was the judge’s adult son.
Krell tried to regain control. “Your Honor, this is theatrics.”
I placed a second folder on the table. “There is also a notarized video statement from my mother, recorded five days before she died. It names me successor trustee and directs me to cooperate with state investigators if anything happens to her.”
My aunt whispered, “Video?”
Dad turned on her. “Shut up.”
There he was. The real Victor. Not grieving husband. Not respected businessman. A cornered animal in Italian wool.
Judge Halpern’s smile was gone now. “Miss Vale, why was this not submitted earlier?”
“Because I wanted everyone under oath first.”
The room went still.
I looked at my father, then at my brothers, then at the judge. “And because three people in this room filed false statements with this court.”
Caleb muttered, “You don’t have the spine.”
I smiled for the first time. “No. I have subpoenas.”
The entire courtroom broke into laughter when my father told the judge I was too poor to inherit the empire my mother had created. I sat with my hands folded neatly in my lap as my family name turned into the punchline.
“Your Honor, she can barely pay rent,” my father said, dressed in a navy suit worth more than my car. “And she expects to control a thirty-one-million-dollar estate?”
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