At my father’s funeral, my brothers stood beside his coffin and mocked the black dress I had borrowed. “Dad left everything to us,” the oldest whispered. “You’ll leave here with nothing.”

At my father’s funeral, my brothers stood by his coffin and laughed at the borrowed black dress I was wearing. “Dad left everything to us,” the oldest whispered. “You’ll leave here with nothing.” I laid one red rose on the coffin and answered, “That’s strange, because he called me three hours before he died.” When the funeral director locked the chapel doors, my brothers’ smiles disappeared. Behind them stood my father’s private attorney, two detectives, and the nurse they had paid to stay quiet.

The first thing my brothers did at our father’s funeral was mock my dress. The second was tell me I had already lost.

I stood beside the polished walnut coffin, clutching a single red rose while rain struck the chapel windows like fists. My black dress belonged to my neighbor, Mrs. Alvarez. It was one size too big and carried a faint lavender scent, but it was all I could afford after six months of unpaid leave spent caring for Dad.

My oldest brother, Grant, leaned in close enough for me to smell the expensive bourbon on his breath. “Dad left everything to us,” he whispered. “The company, the houses, the accounts. You’ll leave here with nothing.”

Beside him, Owen smirked. “Maybe the funeral home needs a receptionist.”

They expected me to cry.

I didn’t.

I placed the rose on Dad’s chest and said, “That’s strange, because he called me three hours before he died.”

Grant’s smile faltered.

Only briefly.

Then he gave a small laugh and straightened his silk tie. “He was delirious.”

“Was he?”

Before he could respond, the funeral director, Mr. Bell, stepped away from the back wall and locked the chapel doors. The click rang through the room.

My brothers turned.

Behind them stood Dad’s private attorney, Miriam Cole, holding a leather file. Beside her were two detectives in dark suits and a nurse named Celeste Ward, whose face had turned gray beneath the chapel lights.

Owen’s smug expression vanished. Grant’s hand froze at his cuff link.

“Why are the doors locked?” he demanded.

Detective Ramos showed his badge. “Because nobody leaves until we finish a conversation.”

Celeste started crying.

Three days earlier, Grant had told everyone Dad had died peacefully in his sleep after refusing treatment. He had demanded a closed casket until I threatened an injunction. He had also produced a new will, signed forty-eight hours before Dad died, leaving everything to him and Owen.

I had stayed silent.

Because Dad’s final call had not been confused.

His voice had been faint, but clear.

“Claire,” he whispered, “they changed my medication. Grant brought papers. Owen held my hand down. Celeste saw everything. Don’t come alone.”

Then there was a crash, a muffled curse, and silence.

The entire call had been recorded automatically through the compliance app I used for work.

My brothers knew me as the broke daughter who left a finance career to care for an old man.

They had forgotten why regulators once called me the best forensic accountant in the state.

And while they spent the week choosing watches, cars, and offices, I spent it following signatures, prescriptions, transfers, and one payment they never thought anyone would uncover.

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