PART ONE
(The Will, the Smirk, and the Garage Key)
I inherited a garage that my son said was worthless.
He got the Los Angeles penthouse.
He called me a useless old woman—then locked the door behind me like I was a stranger.
That was the day everything I believed about family shattered.
My name is Lillian Parker. I’m sixty-eight years old. I’m a widow. And I used to think that after burying my husband, at least my son would stand by me.
I was wrong.
The memory of that morning still burns like a fresh bruise you can’t stop pressing.
I walked into Mr. Jacobs’s office holding my breath the entire ride up the elevator. I told myself the reading of Charles’s will would be routine—somber, maybe bittersweet, but dignified. I pictured quiet voices and careful condolences. I pictured a room that understood the weight of a forty-two-year marriage ending.
Instead, I walked into a room that felt like a courtroom.
The air smelled faintly of polished wood and ink. Heavy curtains kept most of the sunlight out, so the long table sat in a dim, brownish glow. Everything looked expensive and serious, like grief had been turned into a business transaction.
At the far end sat my son, Adrien.
He wore a navy suit that seemed far too sharp for such a somber occasion. His hair was neat. His posture was perfect. The kind of perfect that looked like rehearsal. He didn’t glance at me when I came in. Didn’t stand. Didn’t offer his hand. He just kept tapping his fingers against the leather armrest of his chair, like he was waiting for the check to clear.
He looked like a man who already knew he’d won.
I sat down quietly and smoothed the wrinkles on my black dress the way women do when they need something to do with their hands. My heart was pounding harder than it should’ve been. Too loud. Too fast. Like it had sensed danger before I could name it.
Mr. Jacobs cleared his throat, adjusted his glasses, and opened a thick envelope. He handled it with the kind of care you use when you’re holding something that can change lives.
His voice carried through the room, each word dropping like a stone into still water.
“Charles Parker,” he began, “leaves to his son, Adrien Parker, the penthouse on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, along with multiple investment accounts.”
My eyes darted to Adrien.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
