Sign the papers, Grandma, or we’re putting you in the cheapest home Medicare will

Brooke laughed — that sharp, brittle laugh she uses when she wants you to feel stupid. “Eleanor, honey, we’re doing you a favor. This place is falling apart. You can’t manage it alone.” Tyler slid a pen toward me. “Just sign. We already talked to a realtor.” I set my teacup down. “You talked to a realtor about a house that isn’t yours?” Tyler’s jaw tightened. “It will be. Dad said Grandpa wanted it kept in the family.” I nodded slowly. “Your father said a lot of things at the funeral. Most of them into a bottle.” Brooke gasped like I’d slapped her. I stood up, walked to the hutch, and pulled out a manila folder I’d prepared six months ago — the day I overheard Tyler on speakerphone in my own living room, calling me “the cash cow that won’t die.” I placed the folder gently between them. Inside was a letter from my attorney, a copy of an updated trust, and a photograph. Tyler opened it. His face drained. “What… what is this?” “That,” I said, “is the deed. I transferred the farm eight weeks ago to the agricultural scholarship fund at the community college. The house goes to the widow’s shelter in Millbrook when I pass. And the savings account you were so curious about?” I smiled for the first time all afternoon. “Harold’s oil royalties. Two point three million. Every cent is already in an irrevocable trust for your cousin Maya — the one you called trailer trash at Thanksgiving.” Brooke made a sound like a kettle. Tyler stood up so fast his chair hit the floor. “You can’t do this! We drove three hours—” “Then you’d better start driving back,” I said, “because the locks were changed this morning, and the sheriff is a very dear friend of mine. He’s parked at the end of the driveway. Waved when you pulled in.” I picked up my cup, walked to the sink, and poured out the cold tea. Behind me, I heard the front door slam. I put the kettle on. This time, I’d make it hot.

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