Took out my phone.
And called the one man Carter Whitmore never imagined I knew.
The call connected on the second ring.
“Helen?”
“Sheriff Dalton,” I said quietly, staring through the reception hall windows. “It’s time.”
Silence.
Then his voice hardened instantly.
“He hit you?”
“Yes.”
“And demanded the property in public?”
“In front of everyone.”
“I’m on my way.”
I hung up calmly and slipped my phone back into my purse.
Thirty seconds later, the reception doors burst open behind me.
“There she is,” Carter sneered.
He marched toward me with two groomsmen trailing behind him like backup dancers in an expensive disaster.
“You think storming out makes you look dramatic?” he asked. “You look unstable.”
“Then go back inside.”
“Not without those keys.”
I smiled faintly.
“You really don’t understand what’s happening here.”
“I understand perfectly,” he snapped. “Your husband left you the farm. Emily inherits after you. I married Emily. That land belongs to this family now.”
“No,” I said evenly. “You married my daughter. Not my property.”
His jaw tightened.
Vanessa swept outside behind him wrapped in silver satin and expensive perfume.
“Carter, stop wasting time arguing with her,” she said coldly. “She’s emotional.”
“She’s been emotional for months,” Carter muttered. “Ever since she started talking to lawyers.”
Emily stepped outside then, confusion spreading across her face.
“Lawyers?” she whispered. “Mom… what lawyers?”
I looked directly at Carter.
“The kind people hire after discovering forged signatures.”
Everything stopped.
Carter laughed immediately.
Too quickly.
“There it is,” he scoffed. “Paranoid accusations.”
But Vanessa’s face changed for half a second.
That was all I needed.
Three months earlier, I had accidentally received a development proposal meant for Carter.
The buyer’s name was hidden behind a shell company.
But the land map attached to it was mine.
And the estimated closing date?
Two weeks after the wedding.
My signature already appeared on the paperwork.
Only one problem.
I had never signed it.
That was when I stopped begging Emily to see the truth.
And started gathering evidence instead.
Bank notices.
Emails.
Property drafts.
Deleted messages Emily forgot still synced to the family tablet she used for recipes.
One text from Carter to Vanessa still burned in my memory:
Once the old woman hands over the keys, we push conservatorship if she fights.
Old woman.
I had buried a husband.
Survived droughts.
Fought off a meat company that poisoned our creek.
Saved the farm from foreclosure twice.
Carter Whitmore had never repaired a fence in the rain.
Inside the reception hall, the music stopped completely.
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