Martha gave a fake, patient smile. “Oh, that’s just legal jargon. Don’t worry about it.”
Wyatt leaned in close to my ear. “Honey, don’t make this difficult. We just want to protect our future.”
Right then, the doorbell rang. Martha frowned. “Who could that be so early?”
Wesley looked at his mother and spoke up. “The part of the plan you didn’t see coming.”
When Austin walked in with his lawyer, Sarah, I saw Wyatt’s face go ghost-white.
“I am Bridget’s legal counsel,” Sarah said as she sat down and grabbed the folder. “From this moment on, no one pressures my client to sign a single thing.”
Martha tried to laugh it off. “Legal counsel? This is just a family breakfast. Bridget must have been confused.”
“I wasn’t confused at all,” I said, my voice steady.
Wyatt looked at me in shock. “Bridget, what are you doing?”
“I’m escaping your trap,” I replied.
Sarah flipped through the pages. “This document allows for the sale of non-marital property. This one adds Wyatt to a deed she owned before the wedding. Who wrote this?”
Martha stayed silent, but Wesley spoke from the corner. “She downloaded them from a shady website and had a friend print them out.”
“Shut up, Wesley!” Martha screamed.