Three weeks after the funeral, Tyler called a family meeting at Mom’s kitchen table — the same table where I’d spoon-fed her applesauce for two years. He wore a navy blazer and brought his wife Brittany, who immediately started measuring the cabinets with her phone. “We’re thinking open concept,” she announced. Tyler slid a printed document across the table. “Hannah, just sign here. Mom was confused at the end. Everyone knows the house should go to the son. I’ll give you twenty grand for your trouble — call it hazard pay.” He actually winked. I set down my coffee. Then I reached into my tote bag and pulled out a thin manila folder. Inside was Mom’s revised will, notarized eleven months ago at Huntington Bank, witnessed by her oncologist and her pastor. The house, the savings, the lake cabin in Geneva-on-the-Lake — all of it left to me. Tyler received exactly one dollar and a handwritten letter. “She wasn’t confused,” I said quietly. “She recorded the signing. Dr. Patel has the video. She also kept every text you sent asking when she was ‘finally going to be done,’ Tyler.” Brittany’s phone clattered onto the linoleum. Tyler’s face went the color of dishwater. “You — you manipulated a dying woman —” “I held her hand while she vomited from chemo,” I said. “You sent a fruit basket. From DoorDash.” I slid the letter toward him. He didn’t open it. I did, reading aloud in Mom’s looping cursive: “Tyler, I loved you every day of your life. But love is not the same as trust. Be kind to your sister. She is the reason I got to die at home.” The room went silent except for the kitchen clock. Brittany muttered something about the car. Tyler stood up so fast his chair tipped. At the doorway he turned, voice cracking. “You’ll regret this.” I sipped my coffee. “No,” I said. “I already did all my regretting in that hospice room, alone.” The screen door slammed. I locked it behind him, then sat at Mom’s table and finally — finally — let myself cry.
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