So I did.
“Continue reading, Walter,” I said.
Walter nodded.
“Should my death occur under suspicious or unexpected circumstances,” he read slowly, “my mother, Evelyn Bennett, is granted complete authority to pursue civil and criminal litigation regarding my death, release all medical evidence publicly, and exercise my voting shares against my husband, Adrian Cross, in all corporate matters effective immediately.”
The church exploded into whispers.
Board members seated in the second pew began murmuring frantically among themselves.
Adrian stared at me with genuine panic now.
He thought the reading of the will was the trap.
He never realized I was.
“You bitter old woman,” he hissed under his breath.
Vanessa recovered faster than he did. “This changes nothing,” she announced loudly. “Adrian still runs the company.”
I stepped away from the coffin and approached her slowly.
“You think this is about money?” I asked quietly.
I stopped inches from her face.
“I have recordings.”
Vanessa froze.
Just for a second.
But I saw the fear.
I turned toward the congregation.
“While Adrian was giving emotional interviews to the media,” I said steadily, “I was meeting with forensic investigators. While Vanessa posted dramatic black-and-white tributes online, I was turning over my daughter’s hidden phone.”
Adrian moved suddenly, but Vanessa grabbed his arm.
“My daughter documented everything,” I continued. “The threats. The financial theft. The messages sent to doctors. The attempts to convince people she was mentally unstable.”
The sanctuary became deathly silent.
I looked directly at Vanessa.
“We also recovered every text message you sent Claire,” I said. “Including the ones suggesting she disappear before the baby ruined Adrian’s future.”
Vanessa stumbled backward.
“That’s a lie.”
“Is it?”
I had quietly stopped the cremation process days earlier. I demanded independent toxicology testing.
While they walked into this church laughing, convinced I was too broken to fight back, specialists were finalizing reports about the poison hidden in Claire’s bloodstream.
“Walter,” I said softly.
He reached into his briefcase and removed a black flash drive.
“Ms. Bennett left final instructions,” he announced.
The silence became suffocating.
“She instructed that if Adrian Cross attended her funeral accompanied by Vanessa Hale, I was to play the recording labeled ‘Cathedral.’”
Adrian exploded.
“No!”
He lunged toward the altar.
But Detective Ryan Cole was already moving.
The struggle lasted seconds.
Adrian slammed into the lectern, knocking flowers and water across the marble floor before Detective Cole grabbed him and drove him hard onto the stone.
Handcuffs snapped shut.
Vanessa backed away in horror toward the church doors, only to find uniformed officers blocking the exit.
“Play it,” I said.
Static hissed softly through the speakers.
Then Claire’s voice filled the church.
“Adrian… please… I can’t breathe…”
The sound nearly destroyed me.
“Stop being dramatic,” Adrian’s recorded voice answered coldly. “Drink the tea.”
“It burns…”
“Vanessa got it from someone natural,” Adrian laughed on the recording. “It’ll calm you down. And if something happens to the baby? Well, everyone already thinks you’re unstable.”
Gasps echoed through the sanctuary.
“You won’t get the company,” Claire whispered weakly on the recording. “I know about the shares.”
A loud crash sounded.
Then Adrian’s furious voice:
“You stupid woman. You think you’ll live long enough to use them?”
The recording ended abruptly.
Silence swallowed the room whole.
“Adrian Cross,” Detective Cole announced, pulling him upright, “you are under arrest for the murder of Claire Cross and her unborn child.”
Adrian thrashed wildly.
“You think you’ve won?” he screamed at me. “That company belongs to me!”
I stared at him calmly.
“You built nothing,” I said quietly. “You inherited power. And now you’ve lost it.”
As officers dragged him down the aisle, Vanessa suddenly tried to flee through a side exit.
They caught her immediately.
“Vanessa Hale,” an officer announced, placing her in cuffs, “you are under arrest for conspiracy to commit murder and corporate fraud.”
She collapsed into sobs as they led her away.
The church doors slammed shut behind them.
The reporters rushed outside to break the story. Board members were already making frantic phone calls. Mourners slowly left the pews, too stunned to speak.
Soon only Walter, my sister, and I remained.
I turned back toward Claire’s coffin.
My shaking hand rested against the polished wood.
My daughter knew they were coming for her.
And instead of surrendering, she prepared evidence. She protected the truth. She made sure I would have the weapons necessary to destroy them after she was gone.
She fought smart.
“It’s over now, sweetheart,” I whispered through tears finally falling down my face. “They can’t hurt anyone else.”
Walter stepped beside me quietly.
“The board has already requested an emergency meeting tomorrow morning,” he said softly. “They’ll pressure you to sell the shares.”
I lifted my eyes toward the stained-glass windows where storm clouds were finally beginning to part.
“Let them try,” I replied.
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