I pulled up the Alaska public court records for their divorce. Greg had painted my daughter—a sweet schoolteacher who bought winter coats for her poorer students out of her own pocket—as erratic, verbally abusive, and financially unstable. He had awarded himself the house, the luxury vehicles, the liquid cash, and the entirety of their joint assets. He achieved this because the only person who could have contested it was medicated, vomiting from chemotherapy, and utterly alone.
Then, I checked her employer benefits portal.
I found the life insurance policy.
Payout: $500,000.
Status: Active.
Primary Beneficiary: Gregory Lawson.
I stared at the glowing screen until the letters blurred into a sickening smear of pixels. He hadn’t just abandoned her. He had meticulously structured her ruin. He had drained her cash, expedited a divorce, remarried his mistress, and deliberately left himself as the sole beneficiary of her death. He was waiting at the finish line for a half-million-dollar payout.
I pulled out my cell phone and dialed David Caldwell.
David and I had worked in the trauma ward together back in Chicago. He had been a brilliant trauma surgeon before getting burned out and going to law school. He was now one of the most ruthless, highly-paid estate and litigation attorneys in Illinois.
He answered on the second ring. “Martha? It’s two in the morning. What’s wrong?”