FRACTURED DEED (THE INHERITANCE SERIES Book 2)
The record did not exist.
So they built one.
What began as a single family’s probate dispute expands into a cross-state reconstruction of title, guardianship filings, and mineral leases. As documentation accumulates, counties once treated as isolated cases begin to reveal the same procedural sequence—valuation, partition, conveyance—repeated with administrative precision.
Dexter and Maya are no longer proving a claim. They are building a structure: a Registry that transforms private loss into public record. Each document adds a field, each field creates a comparison, and the pattern becomes visible not through accusation, but through repetition.
But visibility is not remedy.
Courts recognize cases, not histories. Criminal law addresses filings, not transfers. And the question that follows documentation is whether a system designed to process individual estates can confront a collective outcome.
Fractured Deed is the second volume of the Inheritance series, moving from courtroom testimony to archival convergence as the narrative shifts from memory to structure. Here, the law is not asked to restore what was taken, but to acknowledge what the record now shows—and to decide what must change before the next filing arrives.
Because once the pattern is documented, silence is no longer procedural.