I poured myself a glass of water before I answered. “Diane,” I said, “you’re right that Friday is important. That’s the day the probate finalizes.” She blinked, the smile slipping a half inch. I slid a manila folder across the table. Inside was Caleb’s original will, notarized in 2019, naming me sole beneficiary of the Blackberry Lane property, the bakery, and a savings account she didn’t know existed. Underneath it was a second document: a cease and desist from my attorney, citing the seventeen voicemails she’d left threatening my business license, my staff, and my late husband’s memory. Her son Trevor, the one she wanted the house signed over to, had been quietly emailing me for months apologizing for her behavior. I’d printed those too. “Trevor already told me he doesn’t want the house,” I said. “He told me last Sunday, when he came by the bakery to ask if I’d cater his daughter’s birthday. For free, he offered to pay. He’s a good man, Diane. He didn’t get that from you.” Her hand trembled around the stem of the glass. I stood up, walked to the front door, and opened it. The porch light spilled across the gravel drive. “The health inspector came yesterday,” I added. “We scored a ninety-eight. He also happens to be Caleb’s cousin Marcus, who never forgave you for what you said at the funeral.” She gathered her purse in silence, her heels clicking too loud on the hardwood Caleb had laid himself. At the threshold she turned, mouth opening for one last cruelty, but I spoke first. “The locks change tomorrow. The lawyer will mail you the restraining order by Monday. Drive safe, Diane.” I closed the door, leaned my forehead against the wood, and finally let myself cry, not from grief this time, but from the strange quiet relief of a woman who had stopped asking permission to keep what was already hers.
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