Part four: the will, the estate, the consequences.
I wrote and rewrote until the words were exactly right.
Until they would cut the way they needed to.
Sunday, June 15th, 7:00 p.m.
Anna and I stood outside Dock Street Theater. The historic building glowed with lights. Luxury cars lined the street. Women in gowns. Men in tuxedos.
Charleston’s elite.
Through the tall windows, I could see them inside — politicians, doctors, lawyers, the people who ran the city.
And Rachel.
She’d flown in from Los Angeles. I’d seen her arrival on the guest list Charles sent me. She hadn’t called. Hadn’t texted. Not once since the day she’d handed me $100 and suggested a homeless shelter.
“Mom,” Anna touched my arm. “Are you ready?”
I looked at my youngest daughter in her navy dress — the girl who’d given up Paris, who’d worked herself to breaking, who’d offered to sell her car.
Then I looked through those windows at my eldest daughter. The woman in designer clothes who’d given me pocket change.
“Yes,” I said. “I’m ready.”
Tonight, Rachel would learn what that $100 truly cost.
If you’re still here with me, comment 11 below so I know you’re walking this journey all the way to the end.
And let me ask you something.
If you were in my place, what would you do? Would you expose the truth in front of everyone, or would you protect your family’s name and stay silent?
Tell me your choice in the comments, because what happens next will change everything.
And before we move forward, please note that parts of the upcoming story include dramatized elements created for reflection and storytelling. If this style isn’t for you, you’re free to stop here.
The room fell silent when my face appeared on the screens.
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