Tyler laughed — that sharp, ugly laugh boys learn from mothers who never told them no. “I don’t need to read it, Grandma. Mom said Grandpa promised the property to our side of the family. You’re just the wife. You get a room until we sell.” Diane appeared behind him, arms crossed, already mentally redecorating my kitchen. I nodded slowly, walked to Henry’s old oak desk in the corner of the shop, and pulled out a leather folder he’d labeled, in his careful block letters, FOR MAGGIE — WHEN THEY COME. Because Henry knew. Henry always knew. Inside were three documents. The first: the deed, solely in MY name since 1981, when Henry transferred it to protect us during a lawsuit. The second: a notarized letter from the estate attorney confirming Tyler’s so-called paperwork was a forged template Diane had downloaded and filled in herself — a felony in our state. The third, and my favorite, was a printed email chain from two years ago. Diane, writing to her bookkeeper, calling me “the dusty old cow squatting on prime acreage” and outlining exactly how she planned to pressure me into signing once Henry “finally croaked.” I handed Tyler the folder. Watched the color drain from his face one shade at a time. Then I picked up the landline — yes, I still have one — and dialed the sheriff, who happened to be Henry’s fishing buddy of forty years. “Hi Ray,” I said sweetly, eyes locked on Diane. “Remember that forgery you told me to call about if it ever happened? It happened.” Diane lunged for the folder. I stepped back, calm as Sunday. The moving truck driver, sensing the shift, quietly put his vehicle in reverse. Tyler started crying — actual tears, the kind he used to fake as a child to get extra dessert. I looked at my sister, the woman who’d resented me since the day Henry chose me at the church dance in 1976, and I said the only words Henry would’ve wanted me to say. “Get off my land. And Diane — don’t come back for the funeral reception. You were never invited.”
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