Tyler slid a stack of papers across the table before the lawyer could speak. “Just sign here, here, and here, Aunt El. We’ll handle the rest. You can keep the cardigan.” Diane snickered into her coffee. The lawyer, Mr. Briggs, cleared his throat and asked me to confirm my identity for the record. I did. Then he asked Tyler and Diane to please remain seated, because there had been a misunderstanding about why we were gathered. Tyler rolled his eyes. “There’s no misunderstanding. Uncle Walter promised me the lake house when I was twelve.” Mr. Briggs opened a sealed envelope and began to read. Walter’s will, dated three weeks before he passed, left every asset—the lake house, the brokerage, the hardware store, and a life insurance payout none of them knew existed—to a single beneficiary: me. Diane’s coffee cup hit the table. Tyler’s jaw unhinged. “That’s not possible. He told me—” Mr. Briggs raised a hand. “There is a second document.” He pulled out a notarized letter, written in Walter’s careful handwriting. In it, Walter explained that for the last four years he’d watched Tyler max out credit cards in his name, watched Diane pressure him for “loans” she never repaid, watched both of them skip every chemo appointment while I sat in the parking lot with cold sandwiches and warm hands. “To my wife Eleanor,” the letter ended, “who never once asked me for anything, I leave everything I ever earned, and the peace of knowing she’ll never have to ask them for anything either.” I took a slow sip of my tea. Tyler shot to his feet. “You manipulated him! You—” I finally spoke. “Sweetheart, I poured his medication for six years. You couldn’t even pour him a glass of water at Thanksgiving.” Mr. Briggs slid one last paper toward Tyler—the deed transfer for the condo Walter had been quietly paying his rent on. “Mrs. Hartwell will need this vacated by the end of the month.” I picked up my thermos, smiled at the grandma joke one last time, and walked out into the sunlight Walter left me.
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