Heart attack.
Forty-two.
No warning.
Gone.
Financial networks ran tributes before noon. Analysts speculated about stock movement. Commentators discussed succession plans.
Vanessa appeared outside the hospital in oversized sunglasses and black silk.
The grieving widow.
The funeral was held in Manhattan at an old chapel scented faintly with incense and polished wood. Black cars lined the street. Cameras flashed discreetly from a distance.
Executives and investors filled the pews.
I sat in the back.
Vanessa wore tailored black, minimal jewelry, perfectly arranged hair. Her grief looked curated. When she noticed me, her expression flickered—not sorrow, but calculation.
After the service, she approached.
“Emily,” she said gently, resting a manicured hand on my arm. “I know this must be hard for you.”
Her perfume was heavy.
“I’ll make sure you’re taken care of,” she added. “I’m generous like that.”
I didn’t argue. I didn’t remind her how quickly she’d replaced me.
I simply said, “You always did like the spotlight.”
Her smile thinned.
A week later, we gathered at Daniel’s longtime law firm overlooking Central Park.
Vanessa sat at the head of the conference table as if she already chaired the board.
“Let’s begin,” she said when the lawyer entered. “I have meetings.”
Routine bequests came first.
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