The lawyer, a soft-spoken man named Mr. Alderman, adjusted his glasses and asked if there were any other documents to enter into the record. Diane laughed and said, of course not, Walter told us everything. Rick added that I was welcome to any furniture I could fit in my truck, as long as I was out of the farmhouse by Sunday. That was when I slid the brown envelope across the polished table. Inside was a handwritten codicil, dated three weeks before Grandpa passed, signed, witnessed by his hospice nurse and his pastor, and notarized at the kitchen table I scrubbed every morning. Mr. Alderman read it twice. Then he read it aloud. Grandpa had revoked the earlier will. The farmhouse, the two hundred acres, and every share of DeltaCore Technologies passed to me, in full, on the condition that I keep the land in the family and never sell to a developer. There was a second page. Grandpa listed every loan he had quietly paid off for Diane and Rick over the years, four hundred and sixty thousand dollars, and stated those sums were advances against their inheritance, now considered settled in full. Diane’s face went the color of old milk. Rick stood up so fast his chair hit the wall and shouted that I had manipulated a dying man. I did not raise my voice. I told him Grandpa dictated every word while I held the pen because his hands shook too much, and that the hospice nurse had recorded the session, and the recording was already with Mr. Alderman. My mother finally looked up, and for the first time in years I saw her smile. I signed the papers, thanked the lawyer, and walked out into the parking lot where Grandpa’s old blue pickup was waiting. I did not slam the door. I did not need to.
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