What Tyler didn’t know was that for eight months, I’d been three steps ahead of him. It started last Thanksgiving, when I overheard Brittany in the powder room whispering, “Once the old bat signs, we gut the place and flip it by spring.” I didn’t cry. I didn’t confront them. I called my friend Delores, whose daughter Renee is the sharpest estate attorney in Mount Pleasant. I walked back into the kitchen with my reading glasses, sat down, and flipped open the folder. “Tyler, honey, before I sign, there’s something on the porch I want you to see.” He sighed, annoyed, and followed me out. Sitting in Harold’s swing was Renee, briefcase on her lap, alongside Dr. Patel, my physician of twenty years, and a notary named Frank. “Tyler,” Renee said pleasantly, “your grandmother passed a full cognitive evaluation in January. We have it on video. We also have the recording from her kitchen, where you just threatened to declare her incompetent unless she signed over her property. South Carolina is a one-party consent state.” Brittany’s face went the color of skim milk. “Furthermore,” Renee continued, “the deed to this farmhouse was transferred into an irrevocable trust in February. Your grandmother is the sole beneficiary for life, and upon her passing, the property goes to the Charleston Children’s Hospital. Not to you.” Tyler stammered something about a misunderstanding. I stepped forward and took the manila folder out of his shaking hands. “You came here to take everything Harold and I built,” I said. “So here’s what you’ll be taking instead. Your wife. Your car keys. And the last memory you’ll ever have of this porch.” Brittany was already walking to the driveway. Tyler opened his mouth and closed it again, like a fish gasping on a dock. I sat down in Harold’s swing, let the chains creak the way they had for half a century, and watched my grandson drive away. Then I poured myself a fresh glass of sweet tea, and for the first time in eight months, it tasted like summer again.
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