I set the coffee down softly. Then I reached into my worn canvas tote and pulled out a slim navy folder. Trent’s smirk flickered. “What’s that?” he asked, leaning back like the king of a kingdom he hadn’t earned. “Oh,” I said, sliding it to the center of the table, “just Dad’s actual will. The updated one. Filed with Hollings & Reyes in March.” The room went so quiet I could hear the grandfather clock ticking in the hallway. Megan’s head snapped up. Mom’s napkin froze mid-air. Trent laughed, but it cracked at the edges. “That’s not possible. Dad gave me power of attorney.” “He revoked it in February,” I said gently. “After you tried to refinance the lake house behind his back. He called me from the hospital. We drove to the attorney’s office together. He cried in the parking lot, Trent. He cried because he finally saw you.” I turned the folder so they could read. Dad had left the lake house, the Mustang, and the bulk of the portfolio to me — “to my daughter Hannah, who answered every phone call, who drove four hours every other weekend, who never once asked for anything.” To Megan, a modest trust, conditional on completing the counseling Dad had begged her to attend. To Trent: a single sealed envelope. He tore it open with shaking hands. Inside was a copy of the bounced check he’d written Dad two years ago, and a handwritten note: “Paid in full by my disappointment. — Walter.” Mom whispered my name, suddenly remembering she had two daughters. I stood, gathered my tote, and slid the waiver — still blank — back across the table to Trent. “You’re right,” I said softly at the doorway. “The adults are signing now. I’ll be at the lake house this weekend if anyone wants to talk like one.” I didn’t slam the door. A lady never has to.
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