ADVERTISEMENT

MY FATHER ASKED WHY I ARRIVED IN A TAXI — AND BEFORE I COULD ANSWER, MY HUSBAND CALMLY ANNOUNCED HE HAD GIVEN AWAY THE CAR MY PARENTS BOUGHT FOR ME. But the moment I noticed my father quietly texting someone beneath the dinner table… I realized my husband had just made a very expensive mi”stake.

ADVERTISEMENT

And finally one, at two fifty-one, that made my body run cold.

If you tell them about the trust fund, you’ll sink all of us.

I sat up in bed.
I read it again.

Trust fund.
We had never had that conversation.

I had never used that word with him.

I went barefoot down to the study where my father and Stephen were still reviewing papers. I showed them the text without saying a word.

My father read it once.

Then again.

The lawyer reached out his hand.

“Pass it here.”

He did.

And for the first time all night, I saw a genuine look of alarm on his face.

“What trust fund?” I asked.

My father went incredibly still.

I felt a hole open up under my feet.
“Dad.”
He exhaled slowly.

“There’s something I didn’t tell you before because I didn’t think it was necessary yet. And then because…” he stopped, annoyed with himself, “because I thought your marriage could be saved if I didn’t put more weight on you.”

I looked at him without understanding.

“What thing?”

It was Stephen who answered.

“Your grandfather left a testamentary trust for you. You wouldn’t gain full control until you turned thirty-five, or until there was proven financial risk due to economic abuse or marital coercion. You turned thirty-four two months ago.”

I felt a slow wave of dizziness.

“And Patrick knew?”

My father closed his eyes for a second.

“He wasn’t supposed to. But he must have caught wind of something. Weeks ago he asked me two very specific questions about some investments your grandfather left in the grandchildren’s names. I deflected the conversation. I didn’t imagine…”

He went quiet.

There was no need to finish.

He didn’t imagine that Patrick was already snooping around for something bigger.

My voice barely came out.

“How much is it?”

Stephen didn’t respond with an immediate number. He reached for a different folder, opened it, and showed me a summary.

Real estate.
Bonds.

A minority stake in a private clinic.

An old, massive, silent investment account.

It wasn’t a magazine-cover fortune.

But it was enough for a man like Patrick to believe he could solve his entire life if he managed to stay attached to mine long enough.

My stomach churned.

“So it was never me,” I said, more to myself than to them.

My father looked at me with an old pain.

“Not just that. But yes, this too.”

The phrase was honest, and that’s why it hurt more.

ADVERTISEMENT

Leave a Comment

ADVERTISEMENT