Released After 20 Years in Prison—Elderly Woman Returns to Her House Who She Finds Inside Shocks Her…

Released After 20 Years in Prison—Elderly Woman Returns to Her House Who She Finds Inside Shocks Her…

You signed it years ago. Remember when Robert had his first heart attack and you wanted someone to be able to access your accounts if something happened to you? Diane smiled. You made it so easy, Maggie. You trusted me and I used every bit of that trust against you. Margaret felt like she was going to be sick. 20 years, she whispered. You let me rot in prison for 20 years. You told everyone I was dead. You sold my house.

You stole my money. And for what? Because mama left me the house instead of you. It wasn’t just the house. Diane’s voice was sharp now, defensive. It was everything. My whole life, I was the afterthought, the disappointment, the one nobody believed in. And you, you had everything. The house, the husband, the career, the respect. You had everything I ever wanted. And you didn’t even appreciate it. So you took it. I took what should have been mine. Margaret stared at her sister at this woman she’d spent her whole life protecting, loving, sacrificing for, and she realized with a clarity that was almost painful that she’d never known Diane at all.

The sister she loved had never existed. She was a mask, a performance, a lie that Diane had been telling for 50 years. “You’re a monster,” Margaret said quietly. You destroyed my life because you were jealous. That’s all this was. Jealousy. Call it whatever you want. I got what I deserved. You got $2 million in insurance money, 400,000 of my money, and a dying husband worth 8 million more. Margaret’s voice was rising now. How much is enough, Diane?

How much do you have to steal before you feel like you’ve gotten what you deserve? Diane didn’t answer. She just sat there watching Margaret with those cold blue eyes. I’m dying, you know. She finally said, “Pancreatic cancer. 6 months, maybe less. So, whatever revenge you’re planning, you’d better hurry. I don’t want revenge.” “Then what do you want?” Margaret was quiet for a long moment. She looked around the room at the expensive furniture, the tasteful artwork, the evidence of a life built on lies and theft and murder.

I want you to confess, she said. I want you to tell the truth. I want the world to know what you did to me, to Gerald Witmore, to everyone you’ve ever used and discarded. Diane laughed. And why would I do that? Because you’re dying. Because in 6 months, none of this. Margaret gestured at the room around them. None of this is going to matter. You can’t take it with you, Diane. But you can leave this world with a clear conscience.

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