Vanessa sighed like I was a slow child. “Mom, we’ve been over this. The house transfers to me, we refinance, you move into the assisted place in Riverton. It’s better for everyone.” Marcus snorted. “Better for us, anyway.” I slid the papers closer, adjusted my reading glasses, and turned to page four. Then I looked up at the realtor — a young woman named Priya, who finally met my eyes. “Priya, dear,” I said softly, “could you confirm something for my daughter? Whose name is currently on the deed?” Priya cleared her throat. “Ma’am… the deed is held by the Linden Avenue Family Trust.” Vanessa froze. “Right. Dad’s trust. Which passes to me.” I smiled for the first time that morning. I reached into the drawer beside me and pulled out a navy folder Henry had given me three weeks before he died. “Your father restructured the trust in March, sweetheart. After he overheard you and Marcus in the hospital parking lot, planning which rooms you’d gut first.” The bourbon glass paused at Marcus’s lip. “The house, the savings, the lake cabin, and the dealership shares all pass to me, outright. Not the trust. Me.” Vanessa’s face drained of color. “You’re lying.” Priya quietly slid a certified copy across the table. “It’s filed, Mrs. Whitaker. I assumed you knew. That’s why I came — to tell your mother the buyer you brought has no standing to purchase.” Marcus stood up so fast the chair scraped. Vanessa’s voice cracked. “Mom, you wouldn’t actually — we’re family —” I closed the folder gently. “You gave me until Sunday to pack, dear. I’ll be generous. You have until Sunday to return your key, the spare in the planter, and the bourbon in your husband’s hand. Anything you’ve already moved into the guest room goes on the porch tonight.” She started to cry — the loud, performative kind I’d seen since she was nine. I stood, smoothed my cardigan, and walked her to the door of the house she thought she’d already inherited. “Drive safely, Vanessa. The roads in Riverton can be tricky this time of year.”
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