Brielle didn’t sit. She smirked, the way she used to smirk at Maren over the dinner table when she stole the last roll. “Mom, don’t make this dramatic. The house is just sitting here. You’re one woman. Caleb’s investors need to see real assets by Friday.” I nodded slowly and slid a manila envelope across the counter. “Then you’ll want to read this before you threaten me again.” She rolled her eyes, but she opened it. I watched her face change the way a sky changes before a storm — confusion, then disbelief, then something colder. Three years ago, when Tom’s life insurance came through, I’d quietly placed the deed into an irrevocable trust. Beneficiary: Maren. The daughter who drove ninety minutes every Sunday to bring me soup. The daughter who never once asked what was in my will. “You — you can’t do this,” Brielle whispered. “It’s already done,” I said. “Two years ago. The lawyer’s name is on page four.” Her mouth opened and closed. “But I’m the oldest. I’m the one who — ” “Who what, sweetheart? Who borrowed forty thousand for the wedding and never paid a cent back? Who told the neighbors I was an embarrassment at your engagement party? Who just told me I’m uninvited to my own grandchildren’s lives unless I hand over the only thing your father left me?” She started to cry — the loud, performative kind. I handed her a tissue. “You can still come to Thanksgiving, Brielle. Maren’s hosting it this year. At her house. Which, legally, will one day be this house.” She grabbed her coat and her papers and slammed the door so hard the wedding photo on the wall tilted. I straightened it. Then I called Maren. “Hey baby,” I said. “What time should I bring the pie?” And for the first time in a long time, I sat down in my own kitchen — my kitchen — and let myself smile.
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