Vanessa actually laughed when I signed. She poured herself more champagne and told the lawyers to “escort the help out.” I walked to my old Honda in the rain, drove to the little bakery I’d been quietly running on Elm Street, and waited for Monday. Monday came. The will reading. Vanessa arrived in white fur, flanked by her lawyers, already mentally redecorating the estate. Mr. Abernathy, Dad’s attorney of forty years, cleared his throat. He looked tired. He looked sad. And then he looked at me. “Before we begin,” he said, “I need to address the waiver Ms. Vanessa Reeves submitted Friday evening.” Vanessa beamed. “She signed it. It’s done.” Mr. Abernathy slid his glasses up. “The waiver releases Hannah’s claim to the estate listed under the 2019 will.” Vanessa nodded eagerly. “However,” he continued, “Mr. Reeves revised his will in February of this year. Hannah was named sole trustee of the Reeves Family Trust, which, six months ago, absorbed the house, the cars, the company, and ninety-four percent of the liquid assets. The waiver Hannah signed pertains to a defunct document. It releases nothing.” The champagne flute slipped from Vanessa’s hand. “That’s not— that’s not legal—” “It is. Your father was very specific. He said, and I quote, ‘Whoever shows up for me when I cannot speak for myself will speak for this family when I’m gone.'” Mr. Abernathy turned to me. “Hannah, as trustee, you have full discretion regarding distributions to other heirs.” I stood up slowly. I thought about three years of hospital parking lots. Lemon cake. The cardigan. I looked at my sister, mascara running, fur sliding off one shoulder. “Vanessa,” I said softly, “you can keep the ring. But the house, the cars, and the company? Those stay with people who actually matter.” I walked out. The rain had stopped. And for the first time in three years, I slept through the night.
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