I set my purse down slowly. Then I picked up the papers, tapped them straight, and slid them back across the table untouched. “Funny thing, Tyler,” I said. “You assumed the house was in my name.” His phone finally lowered. Brittany’s smirk twitched. From my worn leather folder I pulled a second document — the one my attorney, Robert, had drafted six months ago, the night I overheard Brittany on speakerphone calling me “the live-in maid we’re about to evict.” I laid it on top of Tyler’s transfer. The Hale Family Trust. Irrevocable. Sole trustee: Margaret Hale. Sole beneficiary upon my passing: the Westbrook Children’s Shelter, where I had grown up after my own mother died. Tyler’s face went the color of the lilies. “You can’t — the house, the accounts, Dad’s pension —” “All inside the trust,” I said gently. “Including the diner. Yes, Tyler, I bought the diner two years ago. That’s why I work the morning shift. I like my own coffee.” Brittany lunged for the papers; Robert stepped out of the sitting room where he’d been waiting since four, briefcase in hand. “Mrs. Hale asked me to witness tonight,” he said pleasantly. “And to deliver these.” Two envelopes. Thirty-day notices to vacate. Tyler’s voice cracked into something small. “Mom, please — I was joking, it was just leverage —” I touched his cheek the way I had when he was seven and feverish. “Then consider this leverage, sweetheart. Be the man your father wasn’t. Earn a roof. Earn a wife who doesn’t wear a dead woman’s pearls.” I lifted the pearls gently from Brittany’s neck. “These belong in the shelter’s silent auction. Like the lilies. Like the house, eventually.” I walked past them, up my own staircase, and for the first time in twenty years the marble didn’t feel cold under my feet. Behind me, I heard Tyler finally, quietly, begin to cry. I didn’t turn around. Some sounds a mother has waited a lifetime to hear.
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