“Of course,” Jennifer replied.
“Thomas Carter’s final will… item one: the family home… item two: vehicle… item three: bank accounts…”
Megan listened, her face blank. This was all expected.
Then—
“And I leave all assets and property to Jennifer Green.”
“Wait.
What did you just say?”
Jennifer looked up, face calm. “Tom left everything to me.”
“To you?” Megan’s voice cracked. “You’re the lawyer.
That doesn’t even make sense!”
“I only follow his instructions,” Jennifer said.
“It was his decision.”
Megan stood up fast, her chair scraping loudly behind her. “No. No, this is wrong.
You were sleeping with him, weren’t you?”
Jennifer didn’t flinch. She only tilted her head, like she was bored of pretending. “He loved me.”
Megan’s chest tightened.
When they pulled into the driveway, Megan’s stomach dropped.
A man in a dark suit stood waiting on the porch. He held a folder and looked like someone delivering bad news.
“Mrs. Carter?” he asked.
“Yes?”
“I’m here on behalf of the property owner.
I’m afraid you’ll need to vacate the home within seven days.”
She stared at him, frozen. “What? No.
There must be a mistake. I have three kids!”
“I’m sorry,” he said.
“It’s all legal. The ownership’s been transferred.”
Megan cried: “Please, this is our home.
My kids—”
But the man only shrugged. “There’s nothing I can do.”
That night, after the kids were sleep well, she walked into the bedroom and opened Tom’s closet.
Something slid from the pocket and landed near her feet.
A secured envelope.
With shaking hands, Megan broke the seal on the envelope.
It was Tom’s. She’d know those messy, uneven letters anywhere.
Megan,If you’re reading this, it means I’m gone.
I know I already gave a copy of the will to Jennifer, but I’ve started to doubt her. Something feels off.
Just in case… here’s the real version.
Give it to a good lawyer. One you trust.
You were the best thing that ever happened to me. I’m sorry if I ever made you feel otherwise.
I love you.
Always.—Tom
Inside the envelope was another folded paper—an official-looking document. A second will.
She opened it, reading carefully.
The house. The savings.
Everything. Left to her and the kids.
Her shoulders shook. But it wasn’t sadness this time.
It was anger.
Jennifer had lied.
She’d cheat.ed everyone.
Megan cried loudly, but her hands were steady now. She was ready.
With the real will, Jeniffer`s days were numbered. Within a week, everything changed.
The next morning, she called Carol Reynolds, a local attorney known around town for her no-nonsense attitude and sharp sense of justice.
She listened carefully as Megan told her everything, then nodded and said, “Let’s fix this.”
The court moved faster than Megan had expected.
The court stripped Jennifer of her law license.
Charges were paid. Megan didn’t feel happy seeing her fall—just relief.
In the end, Megan kept the house. The car.
The savings.
One warm Sunday morning, Megan sat on the front porch. The kids laughed in the yard, chasing each other under the soft breeze.
Life wasn’t perfect. She still missed Tom.
“Mom!” Lily called.
“These are for you!”
Megan smiled and took them. “They’re beautiful, honey. Thank you.”
