The lawyer, Mr. Halpern, cleared his throat and read the first will. Vanessa got the piano. Rick got the barn. Diane got a framed print of a lighthouse. They were already smirking at me when Halpern reached into his briefcase and pulled out a second sealed envelope. “Walter left instructions,” he said, “that this be opened only if the family behaved exactly as he predicted.” Diane’s smile cracked. Halpern slid on his glasses. “To my grandson Ethan, who rebuilt the north field irrigation without asking for a dime, who sat with me through chemo when no one else answered the phone, I leave the entirety of Cole Family Holdings, LLC, including the two hundred acres surrounding this house, the mineral rights beneath them, and the majority stake in Vance Grain Storage, which my niece Vanessa’s husband currently manages.” The room went silent. Vanessa’s coffee cup rattled against the saucer. Rick stood up so fast his chair tipped. “That’s not possible, the farm is barely worth—” Halpern cut him off. “An energy company appraised the mineral rights last spring at nineteen million. Walter wanted Ethan to decide whether to sell.” Diane’s hand went to Grandma’s pearls. I stood up quietly and walked to her. “Those aren’t yours,” I said. She started to argue. Halpern slid a photograph across the table, Walter holding the pearls, dated the week before he died, with a note reading, For Ethan’s future wife. Diane unclasped them without a word. Vanessa tried a softer voice, calling me family, asking about her husband’s job. I looked at her the same way she’d looked at me for twenty years. “You told me I could keep the dog,” I said. “I’ll keep the dog.” Then I asked them to leave my house.
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