I picked up the pen. Tyler’s smirk widened. Then I set it down again, right beside the untouched bread plate. ‘Tyler, sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before I sign anything, I’d like you to meet someone.’ I raised two fingers toward the bar. A tall woman in a charcoal suit walked over, briefcase in hand, and sat down in the empty chair beside me. ‘This is Margaret Chen. She’s been my attorney for thirty-one years. She also happens to be the executor of Harold’s trust.’ Tyler’s fork froze midair. Margaret opened the briefcase calmly. ‘Mr. Whitfield, your grandmother asked me to bring three documents tonight. The first is the original trust your grandfather established in 1998. The lake house was never hers to sign away. It belongs to a charitable foundation in your late mother’s name — the one your grandfather created the week you were born.’ Tyler’s face went the color of the tablecloth. ‘The second,’ Margaret continued, ‘is a record of the $84,000 in tuition, rent, and credit card debt your grandmother quietly paid for you between 2019 and last March.’ She slid the ledger across. ‘The third is a formal notice. As of this morning, all further financial support has been terminated.’ I finally took a sip of my water. ‘Tyler, I came tonight hoping you’d ask how I was doing. Your grandfather has been gone eleven months and you haven’t called once. Instead you threatened me with a shelter.’ I stood, smoothing the navy dress. ‘The lake house is hosting twelve foster children this summer through your mother’s foundation. I’d invited you to help. That invitation is withdrawn.’ I left two twenties on the table for my water and walked out with Margaret. Behind me, I heard Tyler stammer for the waiter — and learn his card had just been declined. Harold always said the quiet ones see everything. He was right.
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