
The Stepdaughter's Retribution
Chapter 3
The phone's shrill ring echoed through the mansion's main hallway, cutting through the heavy silence that had settled since Dad's funeral. I paused at the top of the grand staircase, watching as Evelyn rushed to answer it, her heels clicking against the marble floor with calculated precision. Even in mourning, she maintained her performance—black Chanel dress, pearls at her throat, and that practiced expression of dignified grief.
'Mr. Pemberton, yes, of course,' she cooed into the receiver, her voice carrying clearly in the cavernous space.
Theodore Pemberton—Dad's attorney for over thirty years. My heart quickened. This would be about the will.
'Tuesday at ten would be perfect,' Evelyn continued, her free hand gesturing dramatically though no one was there to witness it but me. 'Your offices will provide the appropriate... gravitas for the occasion.'
I remained still, half-hidden in the shadows of the upper landing. Evelyn's posture had changed, her spine straightening with anticipation as she discussed the details.
'We'll arrange a small family gathering afterward,' she declared, voice rising deliberately. 'Nothing extravagant, of course—Victor would have wanted us to celebrate his legacy with dignity.'
She paused, listening briefly before laughing—a practiced, musical sound that never reached her eyes.
'Please inform the other partners they're welcome to join us. The Whitmore family has always valued its long-standing professional relationships.'
The Whitmore family. As if I weren't standing right there, as if I hadn't been Dad's daughter for the past twelve years. I pressed my fingernails into my palms, focusing on the sharp crescents of pain rather than the burning in my throat.
'Catherine!' Evelyn called the moment she hung up, not bothering to look for our housekeeper before issuing commands. 'We'll need Victor's vintage champagne chilled for Tuesday afternoon. And have Robert prepare a selection of those Cuban cigars from the humidor—the ones Victor saved for special occasions.'
Catherine appeared from the kitchen, her face carefully neutral as she nodded. Her eyes flicked up to where I stood, a brief moment of silent acknowledgment before returning to Evelyn.
'Of course, Mrs. Whitmore. Anything else?'
'The silver serving trays need polishing. And we'll use the good crystal—not the everyday set.' Evelyn was already walking toward the sitting room, plans formulating. 'This will be a significant day for the family.'
I slipped away before she could notice me, retreating down the hall toward Dad's study. The room remained untouched since his death—Evelyn hadn't yet dared to claim this space as her own. His scent still lingered, a faint trace of sandalwood and leather that made my chest ache with fresh loss.
The night before the will reading, I couldn't sleep. The mansion creaked and settled around me, its century-old bones whispering secrets I couldn't quite hear. At just past midnight, I made my way to Dad's study, using the small brass key he'd given me on my sixteenth birthday.
'Some spaces should remain sacred, Maddie,' he'd told me then. 'Some conversations private.'
The leather chair behind his mahogany desk still held the impression of his body. I ran my fingers over the worn armrests, remembering how he'd often pull me onto his lap when I was younger, pointing out property plans and explaining market forecasts as if I were one of his executives rather than a child.
His business journals lined the shelves—leather-bound volumes organized by year. I pulled down the most recent one, opening it to find his precise handwriting filling the margins with observations that never made it into official minutes or reports.
'Harrison—late again. Third time this month. More interested in appearances than substance. Concerning.'
'Margaret pushing for expanded role for H. Must remember family loyalty doesn't equal business acumen.'
I turned the pages, finding notes about property acquisitions, market trends, and scattered among them—observations about me.
'Maddie asked insightful questions about the Harborview development. Noticed the zoning issue none of my team caught. Sharp mind, sharper instincts.'
'Watched Maddie handle Evelyn's criticism with grace today. She has steel in her spine, this daughter of mine.'
Daughter of mine. The words blurred as tears filled my eyes. I traced them with my fingertip, feeling the indentation his pen had made in the paper.
The final entry, dated just two weeks before his death, made my breath catch:
'Finalized arrangements with Theodore today. Evelyn will be shocked, but I've watched long enough. Time to set things right. Maddie deserves the truth—and the legacy that comes with it.'
I closed the journal, holding it against my chest as the grandfather clock in the hall struck one. Tomorrow, everything would change. The thought should have frightened me, but instead, a strange calm settled over me—the quiet certainty that Dad had seen everything, understood everything, and in his own way, had prepared me for what was to come.
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