“Friday works,” I said. Diane blinked. She’d expected tears, maybe begging. Instead I pulled a manila folder from my work bag and slid it across the table. “Actually, let’s do it now.” Her smile widened, lipstick cracking at the corners. She didn’t read the documents. She never read anything. She just signed, three times, initialed twice, and pushed them back. “Smart girl,” she purred. “Your father would be proud.” I stood up, poured my coffee down the sink, and made one phone call. “Marcus? She signed. Go ahead and file.” Diane’s spoon stopped clinking. Marcus is my father’s estate attorney. What Diane signed wasn’t a transfer of the house. It was an acknowledgment that she had attempted to coerce a transfer of assets under duress against a terminally ill patient’s dependent — language my father and I had drafted together the night he was first diagnosed. He’d known. He’d known her for what she was before I did. The house was already in an irrevocable trust under my name, filed eleven months ago, the week after their wedding. “What did I just sign?” she whispered. “Your eviction notice,” I said quietly. “And the exhibit attached to the restraining order keeping you out of Dad’s hospice room for the last week of his life.” Her face went the color of the granite. “You can’t — he’s my husband —” “He divorced you on Tuesday, Diane. From his hospital bed. Marcus brought the papers. Dad signed with the hand that still worked.” I picked up my keys. “He asked me to tell you something. He said: ‘Thank you for showing her exactly who you are while I still had time to protect her.'” I left her sitting at my mother’s kitchen table, in a house that had never been hers, holding a signed confession she hadn’t bothered to read. I drove straight to the hospice. My father was awake. He squeezed my hand once, smiled, and asked if I’d brought coffee. He passed two days later, in a quiet room, surrounded by the people who actually loved him.
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