Amelia Anna
My ex-husbandâs new wife showed up at my fatherâs house right after he was buried and told me, âStart packing.â While I was trimming the garden roses, I let her talk⌠until she made the mistake that would destroy her
âStart packing already, because as soon as they read the will tomorrow, this house will be ours.â
Mistyâs voice reached me over the white rose bushes before I even looked up. Her thin heels sank into the damp garden soil like it was a runway, not the place where my father had spent half his life. I kept cutting the dry branches with the pruning shears, slowly, just like he taught me when I was a child: steady hand, but never hurting the plant.
Those roses were planted the day I married Simon. He said white stood for clean beginnings. What irony. There they were, still standing, after witnessing the end of my fifteen-year marriage and the moment my ex-husband left me for his assistant, the same woman now standing in front of me, smelling like expensive perfume and arrogance.
âGood morning, Misty,â I said, without giving her the satisfaction of much eye contact.
She smiled with that fake sweetness she used whenever she wanted to humiliate someone quietly.
âTomorrow theyâll open Harrisonâs will. Simon and I thought itâd be better to talk like civilized people before things get uncomfortable.â
I wiped my hands on my gardening apron and stood up. I was a few inches taller than her, even with her ridiculous heels.
âThereâs nothing to discuss. This is my fatherâs house.â
âYour fatherâs estate,â she corrected, savoring every word. âAnd Simon was like a son to him for many years. The least would be for us to receive what we deserve.â
I felt the weight of the shears in my hand.
âYou mean the same Simon who cheated on his wife with his secretary?â I asked quietly. âThat âsonâ?â
âOh, please, thatâs in the past,â she said, waving her hand like she was brushing away a fly. âHarrison forgave him. They kept going to the club together every Sunday until the end.â
The end.
It had only been three weeks since we buried my father. Eight months earlier, heâd been diagnosed with pancreatic can/cer, and everything moved too fast. I didnât have time to tell him everything I wanted. Not even to ask why, in his final days, my brother Jesse had drifted away from me and grown closer to Simon than to his own bl00d.
âMy father didnât leave anything to Simon,â I said. âHe could be many things, but he wasnât stupid.â
For a moment, Mistyâs smile faltered.
âWeâll see tomorrow. Jesse doesnât think the same.â
A chill ran down my spine.
âYouâve been talking to my brother?â
She stepped closer, lowering her voice.
âLetâs just say he helped me understand your fatherâs mental state in his last months.â
I gripped the shears so tightly my fingers hurt. My father always said: You have to treat roses firmly, daughter, but never with cruelty. Even thorns have their reason.
âGet out of my house, Misty,â I said, âbefore I forget to be polite.â
She let out a dry laugh.
âYour house? How cute. This property is worth a fortune, Cassandra. Did you really think youâd keep it all? Living here like a queen while the rest of us just watch?â
âMy father built this house brick by brick. He planted every tree with his own hands. This isnât money. Itâs his legacy.â
âWake up. Everything is money,â she shot back. âAnd tomorrow youâll learn that the hard way.â
She turned to leave, but before walking out through the garden gate, she threw one last blow:
âOh, and you should probably start packing your things. Simon and I are going to remodel as soon as we move in. Weâll start by ripping out these outdated rose bushes. Everything here needs to look more modern.â
Her heels faded down the path. I looked down at the white flowers and realized I had crushed several petals with my dirt-covered hand.
I pulled out my phone and called immediately.
âAttorney Brenda, itâs me,â I said as soon as she answered. âMisty just came to threaten me.â
Her tone changed instantly.
âWhat did she say?â
âExactly what we feared. Can you come over? Thereâs something I need to check before tomorrow.â
âIâm on my way,â she replied. âAnd donât worry, Cassandra. Your father planned further ahead than all of them.â
I hung up. Then I saw something caught under one of the rose bushes: a small envelope, damp from the morning dew. I recognized my fatherâs handwriting immediately.
It was addressed to me.
I picked it up with trembling hands, feeling like the paper weighed more than it should, as if it didnât just hold words, but a final move.
And in that moment, I realized Misty had said too much⌠and might have just made the worst mistake of her life.
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