News of her passing spread like wildfire.
The Mourning That Wasn’t
The Brown mansion filled with mourners—family, friends, staff, and reporters. But as Amara’s body lay in an open casket, the true nature of those who claimed to love her was revealed.
Her husband Michael and Rachel, the traitorous best friend, were the first to “mourn.” But Amara, listening from within her frozen body, heard them whisper about their plans to claim her fortune and be together. “Finally, we can have everything,” Michael said. “The pills worked like magic,” Rachel replied.
Amara’s heart broke, but she steeled herself. She needed to know how deep the betrayal went.
The Parade of Greed
Over the next days, each of Amara’s loved ones arrived to mourn alone, as required by her will. Her step-siblings, Chris and Tina, argued over her cars and beach house, mocking her memory and revealing they’d only cared for her money. Her father and stepmother, too, saw her death as a financial windfall.
But not everyone was a vulture. When the household staff came, many wept genuine tears. David, her loyal driver, stayed behind after the others left. He confessed his love for Amara and expressed regret for not warning her about Michael and Rachel. His pain was real—unlike the crocodile tears of her supposed family.
On the fourth day, Amara’s estranged mother Linda arrived. Unlike the others, Linda wept for her daughter, not her fortune. She revealed how Amara’s father had kept them apart, and her grief was raw and genuine. For the first time, Amara felt a piece of her broken heart begin to heal.
The Will That Changed Everything
On the tenth day, the family gathered for the reading of Amara’s will. The air was thick with anticipation and greed. But before the lawyer began, he played a flash drive as per Amara’s instructions.
