"How dare she?" a soft, sweet voice hissed. Candis Solomon, her cousin, leaned toward her mother, Eleanor. Her perfectly made-up face twisted with disgust. "Coming to Grandpa's funeral dressed like that."
Arlie's gaze swept forward to the closed casket at the front. She didn't seem to hear the whispers, the rustle of expensive fabric as people shifted, or the tightening of her uncle Arthur's jaw. She just stood there, a ghost from a past they'd tried to bury.
The family lawyer, Robert Sullivan-his face permanently set in professional neutrality-cleared his throat at the podium. "We will now proceed with the reading of Mr. Charles Solomon's last will and testament."
A ripple of anticipation went through the crowd. Arthur Solomon straightened his tie. A confident, almost hungry smile touched his lips. He was the acting CEO of Solomon Industries, the logical heir. Beside him, Eleanor patted Candis's hand gently, her eyes gleaming with promise.
Robert Sullivan opened a thick manila folder. The silence in the room became absolute, heavy enough to feel on the skin.
"I, Charles Solomon," the lawyer read, his voice clear and steady, "being of sound mind and body, do hereby bequeath all my worldly assets, including the entirety of the beneficial interest in the Solomon Family Trust, to my granddaughter..."
He paused. His eyes lifted from the page and found Arlie.
"Miss Arlie Solomon."
For a moment, nothing. Just the lawyer's words hanging in the air. Then the silence shattered. A wave of shocked murmurs swept through the hall.
Arthur's confident expression dissolved into pure disbelief. His face went from ruddy to pale in one sickening beat. "That's impossible!" he choked out, lurching to his feet.
Candis's face went white as a sheet. Her perfectly manicured nails dug into her mother's arm, making Eleanor flinch. "No," she whispered, her voice trembling.
Caleb, Arlie's cousin, had been slouched in his chair. He shot upright. "What the hell?" he muttered, his face twisting with confusion and rage.
Amid the chaos, Arlie did nothing. She just lifted her gaze from the casket. Her eyes were clear and cold, showing no flicker of surprise. It was as if someone had just told her the weather forecast.
Robert Sullivan looked directly at her. His professional calm was the only anchor in the room. "Miss Solomon, do you accept this inheritance?"
Her eyes moved slowly, deliberately, across the twisted, greedy faces of her family. Arthur's rage. Eleanor's shock. Candis's venomous jealousy. Then she spoke, her voice quiet but carrying in the sudden hush.
"I accept."
The two words were a death knell to their ambitions. The raw, unvarnished greed that had been simmering under their grief now boiled over. Guests began whispering furiously, heads bent together, re-evaluating the girl from the countryside. What tricks had she used? How had she manipulated the old man?
At the back of the room, leaning against a marble pillar, a tall man in a perfectly tailored black suit watched the whole thing. Kerr Ward's face was impassive, but something sharp and analytical flickered in his deep-set eyes. He'd come to pay respects to a business associate. He hadn't expected a show.
Candis couldn't hold back any longer. Her voice, shrill with fury, cut through the noise. "You curse! You must have used some dirty trick!"
Arlie didn't even glance at her. She turned her attention back to the lawyer. "When can the paperwork be processed?"
The utter dismissal was more humiliating than any retort. It was like swatting away a fly.
Arthur, regaining a sliver of composure, pointed a trembling finger at the lawyer. "Mr. Sullivan, I question the validity of this will."
"Mr. Solomon," Robert replied calmly, "the will has been rigorously authenticated and notarized. There is also a video recording of Mr. Charles Solomon confirming its contents."
That was a final, unassailable wall. Arthur sank back into his chair, his face a thunderous mask of fury.
In five minutes, Arlie Solomon had gone from a forgotten outcast to the absolute center of the Solomon family's universe. She now held everything they'd ever wanted. And her expression was that of someone dealing with a minor inconvenience. The power had shifted, irrevocably. The war had just begun.