I walked to the foyer, picked up the leather portfolio Daniel’s lawyer had pressed into my hands that morning, and walked back. Evelyn was already pouring herself champagne, toasting her sister like she’d won something. “Before I hand over anything,” I said quietly, “you should probably read this.” I slid the folder across the marble. She laughed without opening it. “Honey, I drafted the original family trust. I know every comma.” “You drafted the old one,” I said. “Daniel rewrote it after his second deployment. The week your accountant tried to move him off the beneficiary list.” Her smile cracked, just a hairline. She opened the folder. I watched her eyes move down the page, then jump back to the top, then down again, as if rereading could rearrange the words. The penthouse was in my name. The accounts had been transferred into a trust two years ago, with me as sole trustee. The Tesla was leased through my catering company, the one Daniel quietly funded so I’d “never have to ask anyone like my mother for anything.” And the final page, the one that made her hand shake, was a letter in Daniel’s handwriting. “Mom, if you’re reading this, it means I’m gone and you’re already trying to take something from her. So here’s what’s yours: the painting in the hallway. The one you said was tacky. Everything else belongs to the woman who actually showed up.” Evelyn’s sister set her champagne down very carefully. The room went so quiet I could hear the ice settle in the bucket. I picked up my coffee cup, walked to the front door, and held it open. “You have twenty minutes to collect the painting,” I said. “After that, building security has instructions.” She opened her mouth. I lifted the folded flag, just slightly. “He served his country, Evelyn. The least you can do is serve yourself out.” She left without the painting. I locked the door, slid down against it, and finally, finally, let myself cry.
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