I opened the folder slowly. Vanessa leaned forward, lips parted, practically vibrating. “The house in Greenwich,” I read, “and the entirety of the Hartwell Trust accounts shall pass to…” I paused. Vanessa actually mouthed her own name. “…my daughter Hannah Hartwell, sole executor and sole beneficiary.” The room went so quiet I could hear Brent’s phone slide out of his hand and hit the carpet. Vanessa laughed, that high brittle laugh she used when something wasn’t going her way. “That’s a mistake. Mom told me. She PROMISED me.” The lawyer, Mr. Okafor, didn’t even blink. “Mrs. Hartwell updated the will fourteen months ago. She was of sound mind. We have video documentation, and her physician signed as witness.” I slid a second envelope across the table. “Mom left you something too, Vanessa.” Her eyes lit up for a second, that same greedy spark from when we were kids and she’d steal my birthday money. She tore it open. Inside was a single handwritten letter and a photograph: Vanessa at the Tulum retreat, posted publicly the same week Mom had begged for her to visit one last time. The letter read, “I forgive you. I just can’t reward you. Love your daughters the way you wished I had loved you.” Vanessa’s face crumpled. Brent stood up like he was about to argue, but I was already sliding a third document toward him. “This is the repayment schedule for the forty-two thousand dollars you took from Mom’s account using her power of attorney last spring. The forensic accountant flagged every transfer. You have thirty days, or Mr. Okafor files criminally.” Aunt Carol finally looked up, and I swear she almost smiled. I stood, smoothed my cardigan, and picked up Mom’s reading glasses from the table where I’d set them for luck. “You had six years to show up, Vanessa,” I said softly. “I showed up every single day.” Then I walked out into the sunlight, lavender still on my hands, finally free.
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