See, three weeks earlier, Marcus had asked me to “just sign a little paperwork” so he could “help manage things.” I’m forgetful, apparently. Not forgetful enough to miss that the document was a quitclaim deed transferring my house into a Nevada LLC called Sunrise Holdings — Brittany’s maiden name LLC. I didn’t sign. I made a copy. Then I called my best friend from my nursing days, Patricia, whose daughter Anna happens to be a senior estate attorney at a firm Marcus desperately wanted to make partner at. Anna came for lunch that Tuesday. She brought a notary. We didn’t change my will out of spite. We changed it out of clarity. The house, the pension, Frank’s vintage Mustang in the garage — all placed into an irrevocable trust benefiting the Huntington Hospital nurses’ scholarship fund, with a modest lifetime residence for me. Marcus’s name was removed entirely. So when Marcus slammed his coffee mug down and hissed, “Friday, Mom. I mean it,” I slid a manila envelope across the table. Inside: the trust documents, a copy of the forged quitclaim he’d tried to slip past me, and a letter from Anna’s firm — on letterhead — informing him that attempted elder financial abuse had been reported to the California Attorney General’s office, and that his firm had been notified of a conflict review. Brittany’s phone clattered to the floor. Marcus went the color of the flour on my hands. “Mom — Mom, wait, we can talk about this —” I stood up, untied my apron, and folded it neatly over the chair. “You were right about one thing, sweetheart,” I said softly. “I am getting forgetful. I keep forgetting why I ever let you speak to me that way.” I walked them to the door. Brittany was already crying. Marcus tried one last time: “You can’t cut me out, I’m your son.” I paused on the porch where Frank used to drink his morning coffee. “No, honey,” I said. “I’m cutting you loose. There’s a difference.” Then I closed the door, went back inside, and finished frosting the cinnamon rolls. They were perfect.
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