But instead, my mother-in-law shamed her in front of everyone and said she didn’t belong. My daughter went still with heartbreak. We kept calm, acted carefully, and three days later, their own lawyer left them white-faced
The reading of my father-in-law’s will happened in a conference room on the twenty-third floor of a glass tower in downtown Chicago. Through the windows, the city looked cold, gray, and expensive.
My husband, Daniel Whitaker, sat beside me. Our eight-year-old daughter, Emily, sat between us in the navy dress she had chosen herself because she said Grandpa Robert liked “serious colors.” Her little hands were folded neatly in her lap as she tried her best to look grown-up. Family
Across the table, my mother-in-law, Patricia Whitaker, sat with the stillness of a judge. Daniel’s brother, Mark, was there with his wife, Lauren, and their three children. Daniel’s sister, Vanessa, had brought her two sons.
Everyone looked solemn.
