I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I just asked one question. “Trent, why do you need my house?” He shrugged without looking up. “Mom says it’s fair. You got the good job, I got the bad luck.” The bad luck, I later learned, was a forty-thousand-dollar gambling debt owed to people who did not accept payment plans. My mother had already promised them my house as collateral. She hadn’t told me. She’d told them. I stood up, thanked her for dinner, and drove home. Then I called my attorney, Priya, who had drafted my trust two years earlier after the first time my mother tried something like this on a smaller scale. My house wasn’t in my name. It was in an irrevocable trust with a single beneficiary — a children’s engineering scholarship at my old high school. I couldn’t sign it over to Trent even if I wanted to. On Friday, my mother arrived with a notary, Trent, and three aunts as witnesses to my “generosity.” I served them iced tea. I let her finish her speech about family and sacrifice. Then I handed her the trust documents and Priya’s card. My mother read the first page twice. Her hand started trembling. “You planned this.” “I prepared for you,” I said. “There’s a difference.” Trent stood up so fast his chair fell. “Then what am I supposed to do?” I looked at him — really looked, for the first time in years. “Grow up, Trent. Same as I had to.” Dad flew back from Arizona that night, furious — not at me, at her. Turns out he’d never agreed to any of it. The scholarship funded its first student six months later. Her name is Maya. She wants to build bridges. I keep her thank-you letter in the drawer where my mother’s key used to be.
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