My Stepmother Smiled At My Father’s Will Reading A
I left before dawn. That was the last time I saw him alive.
When the call came that he had passed, Elena didn’t even call me herself. She had her assistant do it.
And at the funeral, she put on a performance worthy of an Oscar, draped in black lace, clinging to Brad for support, while I stood alone at the back, watching the circus.
Snap back to the present.
Mr. Harrison was wiping his glasses. Elena was fuming. The memory of that secret night gave me strength.
Dad hadn’t been weak. He had been waiting, and now the wait was over.
Mr. Harrison finally settled down. The red flush of amusement was still on his cheeks, but his eyes were sharp as flint now.
He placed his hands flat on the desk.
“Mrs. Sterling,” Harrison said, his voice calm. “You are correct about one thing. There is a last will and testament from six years ago. It essentially disinherits Zachary and leaves the bulk of the estate to you.”
Elena smirked, smoothing her skirt.
“Exactly. So why are we wasting time? I have a real estate agent waiting for me. We’re listing the Hamptons house.”
“However,” Harrison continued, ignoring her. “You seem to be under a significant misunderstanding about how Robert structured his assets. Do you know what a trust is, Mrs. Sterling?”
Elena rolled her eyes.
“Of course I do. It’s a bank account for rich people. Stop patronizing me.”
“Not quite,” Harrison said. “A will commands where assets go after death. But a trust, a trust owns the assets while you are alive. And if a trust owns the house, the car, and the bank account, then the will has no power over them. The will can’t give away what Robert didn’t personally own.”
“What are you babbling about?” Brad interrupted, taking off his sunglasses. He looked annoyed. “Dad owned everything. His name was on the checks.”
“His name was on the checks as the trustee,” Harrison corrected. “But here is where it gets interesting. Robert established the Sterling Family Revocable Trust 25 years ago. It was the basket that held everything he built.”
“And he changed it,” Elena snapped. “He changed it when we got married. He made me the beneficiary.”
“He did,” Harrison nodded. “For a while. But you see, the thing about a revocable trust is that, well, it’s revocable. It can be changed, amended, or replaced entirely.”
Harrison opened a new folder. It was thick. He pulled out a document stamped with official seals.
“This,” Harrison said, tapping the paper, “is the restated Sterling Family Trust, executed 15 months ago. It completely replaces any previous versions. It was signed, notarized, and filed perfectly.”
Elena laughed nervously.
“That’s impossible. Robert didn’t sign anything 15 months ago. I was with him every day. I monitored his mail. I monitored his visitors.”
“You monitored his front door,” Harrison said. “You didn’t monitor his late-night cognitive clarity. And you certainly didn’t monitor the private notary who came in via the garden entrance.”
I watched Elena’s face. The color was starting to drain out of it, leaving her foundation looking like a mask of yellow clay.
“He was sick,” she shouted. “He wasn’t in his right mind. If he signed anything, it was under duress. Or he was confused. I’ll sue. I’ll have it thrown out. You can’t prove he knew what he was doing.”
“We’ll get to his mental state in a moment,” Harrison said, his voice dropping to a dangerous growl. “But first, you need to understand the mechanics of what happened. You see, when Robert restated this trust 15 months ago, he did something very specific. He resigned as trustee.”
“So?” Brad asked. “What does that mean?”
“It means he stopped controlling the money,” I said.
Everyone turned to look at me.
It was the first time I had spoken in 10 minutes. My voice was calm, but my heart was hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird.
“Exactly, Zachary.” Harrison smiled at me. “He resigned, and he appointed a new trustee, and that new trustee immediately exercised their power to transfer ownership of the assets.”
“Who?” Elena whispered. Her hands were shaking now. “Who is the trustee?”
Harrison pointed a thick finger at me.
“Zachary,” Harrison said.
Elena looked at me like I had just grown a second head.
“Him? He’s a construction worker. He doesn’t know anything about finance.”
“Zachary has been the sole trustee of the Sterling estate for the last 15 months,” Harrison declared. “But that’s not the punchline, Elena. The punchline is the beneficiary designation.”
Harrison picked up a single sheet of paper and slid it across the table toward Elena.
“The trust is an irrevocable trust now,” Harrison explained, “designed to avoid probate, designed to be ironclad. And upon the moment of Robert’s resignation as trustee, which was 15 months ago, the trust dictated that all assets were to be legally titled to the sole beneficiary immediately.”
“Who is the beneficiary?” Tiffany asked, her voice trembling.
She had finally put down the travel brochure.
“Zachary,” Harrison said.
The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating. You could hear the hum of the air conditioner. You could hear the traffic 40 floors down.
“I don’t understand,” Elena stammered. “What are you saying?”
“I’m saying,” Harrison leaned forward, “that Robert didn’t leave Zachary money in his will. Robert gave Zachary everything before he died. The house you were sleeping in, it belongs to Zachary. The car Brad drove here, it belongs to Zachary. The accounts you have been using your credit cards against, they are funded by Zachary.”
“That’s a lie,” Brad stood up, his face red. “I checked the bank balance yesterday. There’s 3 million in the checking account.”
“Yes,” Harrison said. “Because Zachary let it stay there. He let you spend it.”
“Why?” Elena whispered, looking at me with horror. “Why would you do that?”
I finally stood up. I walked over to the window and looked out at the city my father had helped build. Then I turned back to face them.
“Because Dad wanted to see if you would change,” I said. “He wanted to give you one last year. He told me, ‘Zack, if they treat me with kindness, if they treat you with respect, we can share it. If Elena takes care of me because she loves me, not because she wants a payout, then we will take care of her.’”
I walked closer to the table, looming over them.
“So, I waited,” I said. “I watched. I watched you fire Maria after 30 years. I watched you cut off Dad’s friends. I watched you, Brad, charge a $40,000 Rolex to the corporate card while Dad was in the ICU. I watched you, Tiffany, skip visiting him on his birthday because you had a Coachella ticket.”
“I can explain,” Brad stuttered, hiding his wrist behind his back.
“And you, Elena?” I looked at her. “I watched you treat my dying father like a burden. An inconvenience that wouldn’t die fast enough.”
“We were married,” Elena shrieked, finding her voice again. “I have rights. Spousal support. You can’t just cut me out. This is financial abuse.”
“Financial abuse?” Harrison laughed again, though this time it was a dark, angry sound. “Let’s talk about abuse, shall we?”
The atmosphere in the room had shifted from shock to a primal panic.
The golden child, Brad, looked like he was about to vomit. Tiffany was frantically texting someone, probably her boyfriend, realizing her ticket to the high life was burning up.
“Let’s look at the numbers,” Harrison said, opening a ledger. “Since the date of transfer 15 months ago, the trust, which I remind you is Zachary’s property, has paid out $2.4 million in expenses related to the three of you.”
“We have a lifestyle to maintain,” Elena argued, though her voice was thinner now. “Robert wanted us to live well.”
“Did he want you to spend $50,000 on a spiritual retreat in Sedona while he was in the hospital?” Harrison asked, raising an eyebrow. “Did he want Brad to draw a consultant salary of $10,000 a month from the company for a job he never showed up to? Did he want Tiffany to drain the emergency college fund for a trip to Ibiza?”
“That was my money,” Brad shouted. “I’m his son.”
“Stepson,” I corrected. “And no, it wasn’t your money. It was mine. Every swipe of that card for the last year, that was theft. Grand larceny, actually, given the amounts.”
Brad slumped back in his chair. The word larceny hung in the air.
“This is ridiculous,” Elena spat, trying to regain control. “You can’t prove any of this ownership. The deeds are in Robert’s name.”
“Actually,” Harrison pulled out a stack of photocopies. “The deeds were transferred to the ZS Trust last year. You just never checked the county recorder’s office. You were too busy shopping.”
“But I have power of attorney,” Elena grasped at straws.
“Power of attorney ends at death,” Harrison said simply. “And it only applies to assets the person owns. Robert died owning almost nothing personally. He was a pauper on paper. Everything was already in the trust.”
The realization hit Elena like a physical slap.
She had spent six years waiting for a payday, enduring a sick husband, playing the role of the devoted wife, only to find out she had been guarding an empty vault.
“You tricked me,” she hissed at me. “You and that old bastard tricked me.”
“Don’t you dare call him that,” I said, my voice low. “He was smarter than you. You thought because he was sick, he was stupid. You thought because I was quiet, I was weak.”
“I want a forensic audit,” Elena screamed. “I want to see the medical records. Robert was mentally incompetent. I know he was. He forgot names. He mixed up dates. There is no way a judge will believe he had the capacity to sign away $70 million to you.”
She pointed a manicured finger at me.
“You coerced him. Undue influence. That’s what this is. I will sue you for everything. I will tie this estate up in court for 10 years. You won’t see a dime.”
Harrison sighed. He looked tired of her noise.
“We anticipated this, Elena. Robert knew you would claim insanity. He knew you would try to drag his name through the mud to get a payout.”
Harrison reached into his briefcase. He pulled out a sealed envelope.
“On the day Robert signed the restated trust,” Harrison said, “he didn’t just see a notary, he saw Dr. Evans. You know Dr. Evans, the leading geriatric neurologist in the state.”
Elena paled.
“He went to a doctor?”
“He underwent a full 4-hour cognitive evaluation,” Harrison said. “MRI, verbal testing, memory recall. Do you want to know the score?”
Harrison slid the report across the table.
“He scored a 29 out of 30. The man was sharper than I am. The report concludes unequivocally that Robert Sterling was of sound mind, fully understood the extent of his assets, and was making decisions of his own free will.”
Elena stared at the report. She didn’t touch it. It was like kryptonite.
“But wait,” Harrison said, “there’s more. We also videotaped the signing. Would you like to watch it? We have a video of Robert explaining exactly why he was cutting you out. He lists the dates you screamed at him. He lists the times you neglected him. He speaks very clearly.”
Elena looked trapped. She looked at the door, measuring the distance.
“You can’t do this to us,” Tiffany cried out, crocodile tears finally flowing. “Where are we supposed to live? That house is our home.”
“It’s Zachary’s house,” Harrison said.
“But we’re family,” Tiffany wailed. “Zack, come on. We grew up together.”
“You moved in when you were 16, Tiffany,” I said coldly. “And you spent the last six years telling everyone at your private school that I was the gardener’s assistant. Because you were embarrassed of my blue-collar job. Don’t play the family card now.”
“We are not leaving,” Elena declared, crossing her arms. “Possession is nine-tenths of the law. You’ll have to evict us. And in this state, that takes months, maybe years.”
She smirked again. A flicker of her old arrogance returned. She thought she had found a loophole.
She thought she could squat in my mansion and make my life hell.
“I expected you to say that,” I said. “And honestly, if it was just about the money, I might have let you stay a few weeks. I might have given you a grace period.”
I reached into my own jacket pocket, but then I said, “Dad told me to open the black file.”
I pulled out a plain black folder. It wasn’t legal sized. It was thinner.
“What is that?” Brad asked, eyeing it nervously.
“Dad hired a private investigator 3 years ago,” I said. “He wanted to know where all the cash withdrawals were going. He wanted to know why his wife disappeared for spa weekends that didn’t appear on any credit card statements.”
Elena stopped breathing. I could see her chest freeze.
“You have no right,” she whispered.
“I have every right,” I said. “I’m the owner of the estate, and I’m the son you tried to destroy.”
I opened the folder.
The sound of the folder opening was like a gunshot in the quiet room. I pulled out three distinct piles of paper and laid them out on the oak table facing Elena.
“Let’s start with the small stuff,” I said, pointing to the first pile. “Gambling.”
I looked at Brad. He shrank back into his chair.
“Brad, you told Mom you were investing in crypto. That’s where the $50,000 went last spring, right? But according to these records from the Bellagio and Caesar’s Palace, you have a bit of a blackjack problem. You’re currently in debt to a loan shark in Vegas for another 40 grand. Dad paid off the first debt to keep your kneecaps intact, but he kept the receipts.”
“Mom,” Brad yelled. “I can explain.”
Elena didn’t look at him. She was staring at the second pile.
“Now the affair,” I said. “Or should I say affairs?”
I slid a stack of photos across the table. They weren’t graphic, but they were damning.
Elena holding hands with her yoga instructor at a hotel in Cabo. Elena kissing a real estate developer in a restaurant booth.
“Dad knew,” I said softly. “He knew for 2 years. He sat in that wheelchair waiting for you to come home, smelling another man’s cologne on you. And he never said a word. Do you know how much strength that takes?”
“He didn’t care about me,” Elena screeched, her voice cracking. “He was old. He was sick. I have needs. I gave him the best years of my life.”
“You gave him nothing,” I roared, slamming my hand on the table.
The sudden noise made Tiffany jump.
“You gave him loneliness. You gave him betrayal.”
I took a deep breath. My heart was pounding, but I needed to deliver the final blow. The one Dad had debated even showing me.
“But cheating is a civil matter,” I said, my voice turning icy. “This. This is criminal.”
I pointed to the third pile.
It was an old police report yellowed with age from a town in Ohio.
“Dad’s investigator was thorough,” I said. “He went back a long way. He looked into your first husband, Elena. Charles Vance, the one who died of an accidental overdose of heart medication 15 years ago.”
Elena’s face turned the color of ash. She looked like a ghost. Her mouth opened, but no sound came out.
“It was ruled accidental,” she whispered. “The coroner said—”
“The coroner said it was inconclusive,” I corrected. “But the investigator found the pharmacy records. You refilled his prescription 2 days before he died. Double the dosage. And you were the one administering his meds, just like you were administering Dad’s.”
The room spun. Mr. Harrison looked grim.
He knew this part, of course. He had helped prepare
“Dad had his blood tested,” I said. “Six months ago, when he started feeling unusually groggy. He sent a sample to a private lab. Do you want to know what they found?”
Elena was shaking her head violently.
“No. No. You’re lying.”
“They found sedatives, Elena. High doses. Stuff he wasn’t prescribed. You were drugging him. Maybe to keep him quiet. Maybe to speed things along. We don’t know for sure.”
I leaned in close.
“But here is the deal. We haven’t gone to the district attorney yet. We haven’t shown them the toxicology report. We haven’t reopened the case in Ohio.”
Elena looked at me, her eyes wide with terror. For the first time, she wasn’t the queen bee. She was a cornered rat.
“What do you want?” she choked out.
“I want justice,” I said. “But Dad, Dad wanted peace. He didn’t want his name in the tabloids alongside a murder trial. He wanted you gone.”
“I’ll go,” she said quickly. “I’ll leave. Just don’t show that to the police.”
“Oh, you’ll do more than leave,” I said.
Mr. Harrison stepped in. Then he slid a single piece of paper toward each of them.
“This is the official distribution of the will,” Harrison said. “Remember, the will controls whatever is left that isn’t in the trust, which is basically just Robert’s personal effects.”
Elena looked at the paper.
“$1,” she whispered.
“To my wife, Elena, I leave the sum of $1,” Harrison read. “To my stepson, Brad, $1. To my stepdaughter, Tiffany, $1. This is to ensure you cannot contest the will by claiming you were forgotten. You weren’t forgotten. You were remembered perfectly.”
Harrison reached into his petty cash box and pulled out three crisp $1 bills. He placed them on the table.
One in front of Elena, one in front of Brad, one in front of Tiffany.
“Take it,” I said. “That’s your inheritance.”
Brad looked at the dollar bill like it was infected.
“You can’t be serious. I have debts.”
“Not my problem,” I said.
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