I had not intended to speak, because grief had rendered my voice a fragile instrument, yet something within me rose with slow, trembling determination.
“No,” I said, my words cutting through the chapel’s suffocating stillness. “My daughter was not unstable, and she certainly was not manipulated.”
Kyle turned toward me, disbelief flashing violently across his face.
“She was afraid,” I continued, my voice shaking yet unbroken. “Despite that fear, she gathered the strength to protect what little control remained within her reach.”
Paige stepped backward uncertainly.
“I truly did not know,” she stammered weakly. “Kyle told me Natalie struggled with anxiety and exaggerated conflicts constantly.”
No one answered her, because the truth now hung in the air with unbearable clarity, sealed within legal language and spoken aloud before Natalie’s casket.
Mr. Whitman resumed reading.
“Furthermore, Ms. Prescott directs that all proceeds from her life insurance policy and any compensation related to her death shall be administered by Mrs. Susan Prescott.”
Kyle’s expression fractured completely.