I signed my name on a line that still smelled like ink, and in that smell I thought I could smell the end of who I used to be.The Blackwood legal office didn’t look like I expected, no black marble, no glass built to intimidate. Just wood paneling, low light, and a long table where Oliver Hayes, the family lawyer, slid contract after contract toward me like we were closing on a house instead of my life. My mother sat stiff-backed beside me, watching every stroke of my pen. My father hadn’t come. Business. As if this wasn’t business too.“Last signature,” Oliver said, kind enough that it almost hurt. He tapped the page. “Right here.”I signed. My hand didn’t shake, which surprised me. Maybe I’d used up all my shaking the night before, alone in my old room, staring at the sealed envelope Eleanor had pressed into my palm, some stubborn part of me wanting to prove I could survive this without cheating.The door opened before the ink had even dried.I felt him before I saw him, a shift in
Last Updated : 2026-07-11 Read more