Brielle finally saw me. Her smile cracked. “Hannah. Didn’t know the perfect daughter was gracing us tonight.” I didn’t answer. I just tapped the folder. “Open it.” She rolled her eyes and flipped it open, expecting another lecture. Instead she found a certified copy of Mom’s revocable living trust, dated eighteen months ago, with my name listed as sole trustee. Underneath it, the deed to the house — already transferred into the trust last spring. Her face went the color of the candle wax. “This isn’t real,” she whispered. “It’s filed with the county,” I said quietly. “Mom called me crying the night you screamed at her about the will. We’ve been planning this ever since.” Brielle whipped around to our mother. “You went behind my back?” Mom’s voice was small but steady. “You told me I was a burden, sweetheart. I decided to stop being one to the wrong child.” Then I slid the second document forward. A printed transcript of every threatening voicemail Brielle had left Mom over the past year — forty-three of them, timestamped, already reviewed by adult protective services. “There’s an open elder-abuse inquiry,” I said. “Your name is on it. If you contest the trust, the recordings become evidence. If you walk away tonight, the file stays closed.” Her husband Trevor stood up so fast his chair scraped. “Brielle, we’re leaving. Now.” She grabbed for the folder; I pulled it back. “The deed copy is yours to keep. Souvenir.” She stumbled out past the waiter, mascara streaking. Mom exhaled like she’d been holding her breath for a decade. I walked around the table, kissed the top of her silver hair, and quietly told the waiter to bring the cake back out. “It’s still her birthday,” I said. Mom squeezed my hand. “You came all the way home for this.” I smiled. “I came home because you finally asked me to.”
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