Mom sits primly on the edge of the ottoman. One leg crossed over the other, she folds her hands on her knees.
I lean forward eagerly, already imagining the dirt she has on our father.
Could it be a notebook documenting all his affairs?
Dirty business deals?
Another hit and run buried under the rug?
Mom opens her mouth and says with her usual stoic expression, âThe contents of your grandmotherâs will was recently revealed. All her assets, money, and properties will go to one of her grandsons.â
âOne of us?â
âThe one who bears the first great-grandchild.â
A tight laugh chokes me. âWhat?â
âYou might not have known, since I intentionally kept you boys from her, but your grandmother was a very harsh woman. Very unpleasant to live with.â Mom purses her lips as if she has a story she wonât tell anyone. âBut in her old age, she began to have regrets. It led to her changing her will just before she died.â
âGran died two years ago.â
âAnd the will was revealed only recently. I was sent a letter from her estate lawyer that outlined her last wishes.â
I lean forward, intrigued. âWhat did it say?â
âThat your grandmother wanted to start fresh. Her dream was to gift her wealth to the generation furthest removed from her own.â
âThe grandson who bears the first grandchild,â I murmur. âItâs unnecessarily competitive.â
âShe was always fussy. Iâm not surprised.â
Mom motions to me. âThereâs more. If none of you have children, the inheritance will default to your father.â
âThatâs B.S.
her daughter.â
Mom waves a hand as if she couldnât be bothered. âI donât need my motherâs assets to survive. Besides, I always knew that the money wouldnât fall to me. Mother and I did not have a good relationship and it worsened when I married Jarod.â
She laughs softly. âI was honestly surprised when I heard she wanted to leave it all to someone in my family. I believed she would dispose it to charity, not out of goodwill but out of spite.â
âDad doesnât deserve it.â I glance at mom. âIs the only qualifier to have a baby? Because one of us can get that done in nine months flat.â
Mom smacks me in the back of the head. âThis is exactly why I didnât want to tell the three of you. You or Zane would be foolish enough to impregnate a poor girl just to piss off your father. Finnâs the only one who would stay out of trouble.â
âThatâs not true,â I mumble, rubbing the back of my head. âFinn would find a loophole and adopt a kid so he could qualify in two months instead of one year.â
Mom slants me a death glare. âEven if you wanted to do such a preposterous thing, itâs not that simple. Your grandmother had a qualifier. Whoever inherits the property must be married first.â
A sudden revelation zings through my body.
âDid that condition apply to dad too?â I ask.
âIt did.â
My eyes lock on hers. Gravity is pulling my body until it feels heavy enough to break through the floor.
âMom, when did dad find out about the will?â
âThe lawyer called him after he called me.â
âI want exact dates,â I press.
She tilts her head to the side, her mouth curving up in a knowing smile. Almost as if sheâs proud of me. âI believe it was around the time when he got married to Marion.â
âWhat a coincidence.â
âA coincidence indeed.â
âAnd I guess itâs a coincidence that he decided to teach at Redwood Prep right around the time grandmotherâs will takes effect.â
âMm.â Mom slides a lazy finger over her pearl necklace. âQuite the coincidence.â
I grip the arm of my chair, glaring a hole into the ground. I should have known there was something bigger than the chairman seat motivating dad. His decision to teach at Redwood Prep and challenge Millerâs power was too random. Too sudden. Dad let Miller run the place for years while he sat back and silently controlled everything. Why threaten the throne now?
It all clicks into place.
The power moves.
The sudden interest in our lives.
The inheritance.
Dad wants us in his sight to make sure we wonât qualify.
Mom turns to me. âZane is in love with that teacher, isnât he?â
âYou noticed?â
âHe canât take his eyes off her.â
âI thought he was getting better at hiding it.â
âPlease.â Mom rolls her eyes. âThere was a moment during dinner where that woman burned her tongue while eating. I thought Zane would climb on top of the table to help her. He was so entranced.â Mom pauses. âYour father must have noticed this too.â
I take a deep breath and shake my hands out. âYouâre saying⦠even dadâs choice of a wife was because of the inheritance?â
âIâm saying, Dutch, that your father wants this money very much. Why? I donât know. I only know that heâs making moves to prevent you boys from even thinking of getting your hands on it. And while I initially believed in keeping you in the dark so you can marry and bear children when youâre older and more settled, Iâm troubled by the lengths he would go. It makes me wonder if thereâs something heâs hiding. Something he wants to make sure we donât know about.â
Dadâs secrets donât mean anything to me. All that matters is thwarting his plan and making sure he gets this money.
âHow much time do we have?â I demand.
âYouâre not thinking of doing anything foolish are you?â
âHow much, mom?â
âTo have a child, you needâ¦â
âI know. Nine months.â
âThe deadline is in twelve.â
Twelve months.
One year to get married and have a kid.
She sets her hands on my shoulders. âI donât want you boys getting into the ring with Jarod. I donât want any of you to get hurt.â
âWeâre already hurt, mom. Look at what he did! He took Zane off the table by turning the woman he likes into his step-sister.â
She flinches. âYes, perhaps that was uncalled for.â
âFinn isnât the type to jump into marriage. Thatâs the only reason dad isnât messing with him. So that leaves me.â
âWhatâs that look in your eyes?â She gasps. âYou have someone youâre interested in?â
âI do.â I think of Cadey and my heart hammers in my ribs.
âDutch.â
âBaby-making isnât a problem.â Cadey wasnât even thinking of condoms when she was grinding her hips on my lap today. âBut Iâd have to drag her down the aisle. Sheâd fight me tooth and nail every step too.â
âIf itâs a fight, it means sheâs not ready.â
âIâll make her ready.â
Mom shakes her head. âDutch, truly liking someone means you donât force them.â
âSo the answer is to let dad win?â
She pins her lips together. Quietly, she says, âIt could be someone else. Someone more willingââ
âWhether I get married or not depends on her.â I spear my mother with a determined look. âItâs her or itâs nobody.â