Vanessa rolled her eyes and stayed standing, arms crossed. “We’re not negotiating, Mara. Daddy bought this house in 1978. You were married into it for five minutes.” Eleven years, but I let it pass. From the folder I pulled three stapled documents and laid them on the coffee table like cards. The first was the deed. Vanessa snatched it, scanned it, and her face went the color of skim milk. “This… this says sole ownership. Mara Ellis Hartley.” I nodded. “Daniel’s father sold him the property in 2016 for one dollar, to keep it out of probate after the IRS lien. Daniel transferred it into our joint trust the week we got married.” Daniel’s father suddenly found the carpet very interesting. “The second page,” I continued, “is the promissory note for the four hundred and twelve thousand dollars Vanessa and Greg borrowed from Daniel between 2019 and last March. Signed. Notarized. Never repaid.” Greg set down his bourbon. “The third,” I said, “is a letter from Daniel’s estate attorney. As of his death, that note is an asset of the trust. I’m the trustee.” Vanessa’s mouth opened and closed. “You wouldn’t.” “I already did. The demand letter went out Tuesday. You have ninety days, or the trust takes the Darien house as collateral, per the lien Daniel filed in 2021. He filed it the night you told him at Christmas that his cancer was, and I quote, ‘finally giving the family some peace.'” The room went so quiet I could hear the ice melting in Greg’s glass. Daniel’s mother reached for my hand. I stepped back. “Daniel knew exactly who you were. He just hoped he was wrong.” I picked up the keys from the credenza, the ones Vanessa had been reaching for, and dropped them into my coat pocket. “The caterers leave at four. So do all of you. The locksmith arrives at four-fifteen.” At the door I turned. “And Vanessa? Real Hartleys pay their debts.”
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