My pulse jumped. “Why?”
He grabbed the phone with shaking hands. “Call the police. Call legal. Now.”
Two security guards moved toward the entrance.
I looked down at the small book. “What is this?”
The clerk swallowed. “This account was reported closed seventeen years ago. But it wasn’t. It was hidden. And someone tried to access it this morning.”
“This morning?”
He nodded. “Under the name Victor Hale.”
My father.
The bank manager hurried over—a silver-haired woman with sharp eyes. She introduced herself as Diana Cross and led me into a private room. Through the glass wall, I saw police officers entering the lobby.
Diana opened a file on her tablet. “Your grandmother held a protected deposit account, several certificates, and a trust-linked savings portfolio. Current estimated value: two point eight million dollars.”
The room tilted.
I gripped the chair. “That’s impossible.”
“It gets worse,” Diana said. “Seventeen years ago, someone submitted forged documents claiming your grandmother was mentally unfit and transferring control to her son. The transfer failed because she had placed a fraud lock on the account.”
Grandma had known.
Diana went on, “Since then, there have been repeated attempts to break that lock. The latest was filed today, using a death certificate and a power of attorney.”
I stared at her. “She died three days ago.”
“Yes,” Diana said. “And the power of attorney is dated yesterday.”
My father had forged papers before Grandma was even buried.
My grief turned to ice.
The police asked questions. I answered calmly. Then I made one call.
Mr. Bell arrived within thirty minutes, rain glistening on his bald head. He carried a sealed envelope Grandma had left with him.
“Elise,” he said gently, “your grandmother told me to give this to you only after you went to the bank.”
Inside was a letter in her crooked handwriting.
My darling girl,
If Victor throws this book away, pick it up. He always hated what he could not control. The account is real. So are the documents in the safe deposit box. Do not cry in front of them. Let the law do what I could not.
Diana opened the safe deposit box with two officers present.
Inside were property deeds, old letters, photographs, recordings on a flash drive, and a handwritten ledger. Every stolen rent payment. Every forged signature. Every threat my father had made to force Grandma out of her own assets.
At the bottom was one last envelope.
For Elise, when she is ready to stop being afraid.
I smiled for the first time that day.
My father had thrown a fortune into a grave because he believed I was too weak to bend down and retrieve it.
He had chosen the wrong woman.
Part 3
Three days later, my father summoned me to Grandma’s house.
He thought I had come to surrender.
Celeste sat on the velvet sofa, sipping tea from Grandma’s china. Mark leaned against the fireplace, tossing Grandma’s silver lighter into the air.
Father stood by the window like a king surveying conquered land.
“You’ve had your little bank adventure,” he said. “Now be sensible. Sign whatever they gave you over to me, and I might let you keep some furniture.”
I looked around the room Grandma had polished every Sunday—her curtains, her books, the scent of lemon soap still lingering.
“You broke into her house,” I said.
Father smiled. “My mother’s house.”
“No,” I said. “Mine.”
Mark laughed. “She’s insane.”
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