Sunday came. Brielle arrived with Trent, a notary she’d hired herself, and that triumphant little smirk she’d worn since she was nine. The dining room was set for six. ‘Who else is coming?’ she asked, irritated. I told her to sit. Then the doorbell rang. In walked Daniel’s brother — Uncle Theo, the estate attorney. Behind him, my son Caleb, the one Brielle had frozen out for ‘not contributing.’ And behind him, Mrs. Alvarez, our neighbor of thirty years, holding a folder. Brielle’s smile flickered. Theo opened his briefcase calmly. ‘Margaret asked me to read something before any documents get signed.’ He pulled out Daniel’s original will, the real one — not the summary Brielle had been waving around. The house wasn’t half mine. It was entirely mine, held in a trust Daniel set up the year before he passed, with one condition: it could never be transferred to any child who pressured me. Brielle’s face went white. ‘That’s — that’s not enforceable —’ Theo slid over the second page. Her own emails. Forwarded by Trent’s assistant, who happened to be Mrs. Alvarez’s granddaughter. Subject lines like ‘pushing Mom out by spring’ and ‘apartment near the highway is cheapest.’ I finally spoke. ‘You said I wouldn’t see another holiday if I didn’t sign, sweetheart. So I made sure I’d see every one — just not with you.’ I slid her a smaller envelope. Inside was a printed photo of Caleb’s new baby, born three weeks ago. A grandchild she didn’t know existed because Caleb had asked me to keep it quiet until he was sure she couldn’t poison it. Brielle stood up so fast her chair tipped. Trent was already walking out. I poured Caleb a cup of tea with steady hands this time. ‘Stay for dinner,’ I told him. ‘Your father’s recipe.’ And for the first time in eleven months, the oak banister heard laughter again.
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