Then her tone sharpened.
“You have no right—”
“I have every right,” I said. “And you know why.”
She tried a new strategy—crying.
“I lost your father,” she whispered. “How can you do this to me?”
I didn’t raise my voice.
“I lost him too,” I said. “The difference is… you got to stand beside him while he died. And you used that time to steal.”
Her breath hitched.
Then she hissed, “You’ll regret this.”
I hung up.
And for the first time, I didn’t feel guilty.
THE SECOND LETTER
Months into the investigation, Marisol called me and said, “There’s something else.”
She slid another document across her desk.
A copy of my father’s final arrangements.
Not the ones Linda told everyone about.
The real ones.
My father had requested a private burial under a tree in a small plot owned by an old family friend outside of town—no public listing, no obituary details, no formal grave marker with his name.
Just a quiet place.
A place Linda couldn’t use for sympathy.
A place Linda couldn’t control.
Harold, the groundskeeper, had been the only witness.
My father had known exactly what kind of person Linda was.
He’d simply waited too long to admit it.
Marisol looked at me.