Sunday came. Vanessa arrived in a white pantsuit with a notary she’d hired herself, dragging Daniel behind her like luggage. Mia was conveniently left with a sitter. They sat in my living room, the same couch where Frank used to read Mia bedtime stories, and Vanessa slid a stack of deed-transfer papers across the coffee table. “Just initial here, here, and here, Eleanor. We’re doing you a favor.” I poured tea. I asked the notary to wait in the kitchen. Then I opened my own folder. Inside was the trust Frank and I had quietly restructured eighteen months before he died — the one Vanessa never knew existed. The house wasn’t in my name. It was in Mia’s, held in an irrevocable trust with me as sole trustee until she turns twenty-five. The restaurant shares Daniel thought he was inheriting? Same trust. Same beneficiary. One grandchild. “I can’t sign over what I don’t own, dear,” I said. Vanessa’s face went the color of the tablecloth. Then I slid the second folder over. Bank statements. Forty-three thousand dollars withdrawn from Mia’s college fund over eight months, transferred to an account in Vanessa’s maiden name. Spa weekends. A leased Range Rover. A Cabo trip Daniel was told was “a girls’ retreat.” I’d had a forensic accountant on it since March. “The state home you mentioned,” I said, sipping my tea, “has a lovely visiting room. I checked. You’ll have three to five years to enjoy it, according to my attorney.” Daniel finally looked up. Really looked. At his wife. At his mother. At the woman he’d let speak to me that way in public. He whispered, “Mom, I didn’t know about the money. I swear.” I believed him. That’s why I handed him the third folder — divorce paperwork already drafted, with full custody of Mia contingent on cooperation with the fraud investigation. Vanessa stood up shaking. “You can’t do this to me.” I smiled the same smile I gave her at the steakhouse. “Sweetheart,” I said, “I already did. On Tuesday.” The notary she brought ended up notarizing Daniel’s signature instead. Mia moved into the guest room that night. We baked cookies. Frank’s recipe.
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