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A thick bundle of letters lay beneath the papers, tied carefully with a piece of twine.
One for almost every year Thomas and I had been apart.
A handwritten note rested on top.
“I don’t understand,” I whispered.
“Read the note,” Walter said. “Thomas wanted you to learn the truth in his own words.”
Over time, she had also become his friend.
He had tried to warn her.
When she eventually died with almost nothing, Raymond had walked away with far more money than anyone expected.
Thomas never forgot what had happened.
He also discovered that Raymond had started calling me regularly and asking questions about my finances.
Thomas understood what Raymond was planning.
Walter nodded.
The wedding had not been a rushed decision made by a dying man.
Thomas had planned everything.
He knew that becoming my legal husband would give him a powerful way to protect me.
He had placed his estate inside a secure trust and appointed an attorney who would prevent Raymond—or anyone else—from gaining control of my life.
“The trap was never meant for me,” I said.
“No,” Walter replied. “It was meant for Raymond.”
I pressed Thomas’s letter against my chest.
For more than fifty years, I had avoided saying his name.
Now it was the only name I wanted to speak.
Three days later, Raymond arrived at my apartment and pounded angrily on the door.
He carried a folder filled with threats, accusations, and promises to challenge everything Thomas had arranged.
Walter happened to be sitting at my kitchen table drinking tea.
“Every document is legally valid,” Walter told him calmly. “You are welcome to challenge the trust, but you will lose.”
Raymond stared at me with fury.
“You foolish old woman.”
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