Sign the house over to your brother, Eleanor, or don’t bother coming to Mom’s

I came back from the study with a thick folder and set it gently on the table. Vivian smirked at Brent like, see, I told you she’d fold. She flipped it open, pen ready — and froze. Because the first page wasn’t a transfer of deed. It was a notarized copy of Mom’s revised will, dated fourteen months ago, witnessed by her physician and her priest. The house wasn’t in Mom’s name anymore. Mom had quietly deeded it to me in 2022, in exchange for me becoming her full-time caregiver. Vivian’s face went the color of the wine she’d been swirling. “This is forged,” Brent snapped, flipping pages. I slid the next document across. Audio transcripts. Mom, lucid, on three separate recordings, explaining why she was leaving everything to “the daughter who actually showed up.” Then the bank statements — the ones showing Vivian had been forging Mom’s signature on checks for two years, draining nearly forty thousand dollars from her pension account. I’d known for months. I’d just been waiting. “I already filed a report with the state,” I said softly. “The detective’s name is on page nine if you’d like to introduce yourself before he calls.” Brent took one step back from his wife like she was on fire. Vivian started crying — the loud, theatrical kind, the kind Mom used to call “performance weather.” I picked up the crystal glass from her hand, rinsed it, and set it back in the cabinet where it belonged. “You’re right about one thing,” I told her, opening the front door. “I won’t see you at the funeral. You’re not invited.” She stood on the porch screaming my name as I turned the deadbolt. Then I walked back to the recliner where Mom used to sleep, pulled the quilt over my shoulders, and finally, for the first time in six years, I let myself cry. Not because I lost a sister. Because I realized I’d never really had one.

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