Diane uncapped the fountain pen with a flourish. “The lake house, the brokerage accounts, the Kensington property,” she recited, like she was reading a shopping list. “Shall I sign in blue or black, Mr. Halvorsen?” The attorney cleared his throat. “Mrs. Whitaker, before you sign, I’m obligated to disclose the updated will filed six weeks before Mr. Whitaker’s passing.” Diane’s smile froze. “Updated? No. The will from 2019 is the operative document.” “It was,” Mr. Halvorsen said gently, “until February.” He slid a second folder, thinner, toward me. My father’s handwriting was on the cover. I opened it slowly. Diane’s sons stopped smirking. “Dad came to see me at the hospice,” I said quietly. It was the first time I’d spoken all afternoon. “The week after you told the nurses to stop letting me visit. He asked me to drive him to his lawyer.” Diane’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. “He left you the Florida condo, Diane. The one with the mortgage you’ve been hiding from him. The lake house, the brokerage, the Kensington property, his vintage car collection, and the controlling shares in the company,” Mr. Halvorsen read, “all pass to his daughter, Eleanor Whitaker.” Her bracelet clinked against the table as her hand began to shake. “This is a forgery. He wasn’t lucid. I’ll contest every page.” “He recorded the signing,” I said. I set my phone on the table and pressed play. My father’s voice, thin but certain, filled the room. *I know exactly what I’m doing. I know exactly who she is.* Diane’s older son stood up so fast his chair tipped. “Mom, let’s go.” “Sit down,” I said. He sat. I slid one last document across the table. “That’s a thirty-day notice to vacate the Kensington house. Dad’s house. My house, now.” I stood, smoothed the gray cardigan, and walked to the door. At the threshold I turned. “Sign in blue, Diane. It photographs better for the court filing.”
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