The Dirt They Stood On
“Two years in prison won’t kill you, Alice.”
My father said it the way some men order a second cup of coffee—mildly irritated, mildly bored. He sat behind the mahogany desk in his study, sliding a thick folder toward me as casually as if he were passing the salt. “Minimum security.
You’re used to struggling. Nobody looks at you. You’ll be fine.”
The word you had never sounded so sharp.
I looked at the folder. It was fat—the kind that meant years of cheating condensed into paper. Tax fraud.
Embezzlement. Crimes with long names and longer sentences. On the leather sofa, my sister Beatrice made a wounded sound.
She pressed a white handkerchief to her lower lashes, dabbing away tears before they ruined her mascara. Our mother sat beside her, rubbing her back in soothing circles. “It’s not fair,” Beatrice whispered.
“I didn’t mean for it to go this far. Daddy, you promised I’d be okay.”
“I am fixing it,” my father said, his tone tender when he spoke to her, cold granite when he looked at me. “But I can’t fix it without cooperation.”
I opened the folder.
The name on the first page was Beatrice’s—her company, her accounts, her signature, her mess. Numbers that would make any auditor sit up straight. Wire transfers, investor names, forged documents.
I recognized the smell of rot. “They’ll trace this,” I said quietly. “That’s why we need a fall person,” my father replied.
“Someone who mismanaged things. Someone who can plead guilty, do a short stint, and put this behind us.”
“Us,” I repeated. “Yes, us.
Family.”
Beatrice sniffled louder. “I can’t go to prison. The wedding is next month.
The Sterlings will call everything off. Harrison’s mother already doesn’t like me. If this comes out, it will destroy everything.”
There it was.
Not the crime. Not the stolen money. The crisis was a questioned seating chart and a canceled string quartet.
My mother looked at me, mascara perfect. “Be reasonable, Alice. You’re not married.
You have no children. You rent. Two years in minimum security, you keep your head down, and we’ll take care of you afterward.”
I laughed, a short, ugly sound.
“What?” Mother asked sharply. “Nothing. Go on.”
My father leaned back, fingers steepled.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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