You signed the will, Aunt Diane. Now stand still and let the room see

I got up slowly, picked up every lure, and set the shoebox back on the table. Then I asked the lawyer one quiet question: “Sir, whose signature is on page four?” Diane snapped that it was Grandpa’s, obviously, notarized three weeks before he passed — back when, according to her, he was “finally thinking clearly.” I nodded and pulled my phone out of the cardigan pocket. I didn’t say a word. I just pressed play. Grandpa’s voice filled the library, thin but sharp as a blade: “Diane came by today with papers. She thinks I don’t know she forged the last one. Meredith, sweetheart, if you’re hearing this, everything’s already been moved. The house, the land, the leather company in Georgetown, the trust — it’s under your name at Halverson & Reed. This tape is your proof.” Diane’s face went the color of old paper. Grant lunged for the phone; the library doors opened first. Two federal agents walked in with the REAL family attorney — Mr. Halverson himself — followed by a woman in a navy suit holding a forensic-document folder an inch thick. Behind them, my “quiet” fiancé stepped in, the one Diane had called “that landscaper boy who plants marigolds.” Except he wasn’t in gardening clothes. He was in a charcoal suit with a Whitfield Holdings badge clipped to his lapel, because he’d been the acting CEO Grandpa appointed six months ago — the CEO Diane had been emailing all week, begging for a “family loan,” never once asking his name. He looked at Diane, then at the pearls around her neck. “Ma’am,” he said, “those belong to my wife. And so does the chair you’re sitting in.” Diane opened her mouth. I slid the amended will back across the mahogany, right into the envelope she’d shoved at me, and smiled for the first time in two years. “You really thought Grandpa left it all to *you*?”

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