“Sweetheart,” I said, “you brought paperwork to brunch. Let me bring some too.” I reached into my tote and pulled out a slim manila envelope. Vanessa’s smirk flickered. Grant leaned forward like a shark smelling chum. I slid the first page across. “That’s the deed to the Craftsman. Notice the date. Three weeks ago I transferred it into an irrevocable trust. The sole beneficiary is a nonprofit that provides housing for widowed nurses. I retain lifetime residency. Nobody — not you, not Molly, not a judge — can move me out or sell it out from under me.” Vanessa’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. I slid the second page. “That’s a copy of the updated will. The 401k, the life insurance, your father’s coin collection — all of it now splits three ways. One third to Molly. One third to the twins’ education trust. One third to the same nonprofit.” Grant’s face went the color of old milk. “And you?” Vanessa finally choked out. “What does Molly get from you?” I laughed, soft. “Vanessa. Molly never asked for the house. Molly called me last Tuesday crying because you’d been pressuring her, telling her I’d offered. I hadn’t. She begged you to stop. You didn’t.” I tapped the third page. “That’s a printout of the texts she forwarded me. Including the one where you told her, quote, ‘Mom’s getting old, she won’t fight us.'” The waiter drifted past. I ordered another coffee, calm as Sunday. “You were right about one thing, honey. I am getting old. That’s exactly why I stopped waiting for my children to decide who I get to be.” I stood, kissed the top of her frozen head, and left two twenties on the table. “Thanksgiving is at Molly’s this year. You’re welcome to come. Bring the paperwork if you want. We’ll use it to start the fire.”
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