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They didn’t know the truth. They thought I was just a lucky chef who had stumbled into success. More importantly, they thought they still held power over me because they lived in the sprawling, three-million-dollar ancestral family home—the house they believed my late grandmother, Beatrice, had left to Evelyn in her will.
But as I looked at the smug, expectant smile on my sister’s face, I didn’t feel the old, familiar sting of rejection. Instead, I felt the heavy, comforting weight of a cold brass key resting in the pocket of my chef’s trousers. It was the key to the very house they currently slept in.
Because Grandma Beatrice wasn’t a fool. She had seen through Evelyn’s cruelty and Chloe’s profound laziness. Before passing away, Beatrice had secretly bypassed Evelyn entirely. She had left the sprawling estate to me, placed in a blind, irrevocable trust. Evelyn had been living there for five years under a legal “tenancy at will”—a grace period I had silently, secretly allowed out of lingering, misplaced guilt.