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I rolled onto my back and blinked up at them.
Their faces were priceless.
Beatrice recovered first and tried to embrace me.
“Of course I’m alive,” I said weakly. “Takes more than a dizzy spell to kill an old trucker.”
I let them believe I was confused. Then I told them the scare had made me want to get my affairs in order.
They smiled.
Over the next week, Sterling moved quietly. Accounts were frozen. Properties were locked. Trust access was suspended. A toxicologist confirmed the napkin contained digoxin. DNA tests confirmed Terrence was not mine, but Silas’s. The unborn baby was not Terrence’s either.
The recorder in my pocket caught every word.
By Saturday, everything was ready.
Beatrice wore cream silk.
Megan wore soft green.
Pastor Silas stood at the front, looking righteous.
“Many of you think you are here to witness a transfer of power,” I said. “You are. But first, we’re going to take a walk down memory lane.”
The lights dimmed.
The security footage from the Gilded Oak appeared on the screen.
The sanctuary went silent as Beatrice and Megan toasted to “the stupidest man in Atlanta.”
They watched the plan unfold: the lakehouse, the trust, the baby, the personal trainer, the poisoning.
When Beatrice’s voice filled the church—“I’ve been crushing digoxin into his smoothies”—five hundred people sat frozen.
Then the café footage played.
Megan’s threat echoed through the sanctuary.
After that came the DNA results.
Terrence Barnes and Elijah Barnes: 0% probability of paternity.
Terrence Barnes and Silas Jenkins: 99.9%.
The church erupted.
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