The reading of the will is a masterclass in posthumous cruelty. The lawyer, a grim-faced woman named Mrs. Voss, explains: Arthur has left a fortune—$12 million and the estate—to be split equally among his "acknowledged heirs." But there is a clause. “To ensure ‘authentic reconciliation,’ all heirs must reside together in the family home for thirty consecutive nights. No single night may be missed. If any heir leaves for more than twenty-four hours, or if a physical altercation occurs, the entire inheritance reverts to the Arthur Whitmore Foundation for Corporate Ethics.” Liam laughs bitterly. Chloe’s face goes white. Eleanor calmly asks if a coma counts as a violation. Mrs. Voss slides over a second document: Ivy’s DNA results.

But something unexpected happens. Eleanor proposes a vote: “We give Ivy her full share. Not because the will says so. Because we choose to.” Liam and Chloe agree without hesitation. Ivy, for the first time, cries.

Mrs. Voss arrives at 8 AM. The thirty days are complete. The money will be released.

That night, they don’t speak. But Chloe sneaks into Eleanor’s room and lies at the foot of her bed, just like she did after nightmares. No words. Just presence.

Liam admits he stole the money because he thought buying a business would finally make Arthur say “well done.” Chloe admits her friend’s death was a drunk driving accident—Chloe was the driver, and her father paid off the police. Eleanor admits she didn’t protect them. She became the enforcer instead. “I told you to stand up straight, to stop crying, to ‘not give him the satisfaction.’ I was his deputy. And I’m so sorry.”

Something shifts. They aren’t fighting over the inheritance anymore. They’re fighting over who gets to define what Arthur did to them.

The trap is not the house. The trap is each other.

Ivy reveals the real reason Arthur told her everything. It wasn’t leverage. It was a game. Arthur wanted to see if Ivy would use the secrets to destroy them, or if they would destroy each other before she had to. “He bet on the latter,” she says. “He said, ‘Blood doesn’t thicken, it curdles.’”