I didn’t argue. I didn’t even set down my coffee. I just tilted my head and asked, “Did Mom tell you the house was yours, Van? Or did you just decide?” Her smile tightened. “Grandma always meant for me to have it. You were just the caretaker.” The real estate agent shifted uncomfortably. The fiancé checked his watch. I walked past them into the kitchen, opened the drawer beneath the toaster, and pulled out a manila folder. Inside was Grandma’s will, notarized and filed three years before she passed — leaving the lake house, the surrounding twelve acres, and the boathouse to me, by name, in exchange for the labor and property taxes I had personally covered since I was twenty-three. Receipts attached. Photographs of every repair. A handwritten letter from Grandma that began, “Vanessa will try. Don’t let her.” I laid it all on the marble island I had installed myself. The agent leaned in, read the first page, and quietly excused herself out the front door. The fiancé followed thirty seconds later, muttering about a call. Vanessa’s champagne flute trembled. “This is a forgery,” she hissed. “Then you’ll have no problem with me calling Mr. Abernathy, Grandma’s attorney,” I said, sliding my phone across the counter. “He’s expecting your call. He warned me you’d come.” Her face drained. She hadn’t known Grandma had written that letter. She hadn’t known the neighbors had signed affidavits about who actually lived here. She hadn’t known the property had already been re-titled, insured, and homesteaded in my name for two full years. “Vanessa,” I said gently, opening the front door for her, “the cleaners don’t need access. You do — to the driveway. Your Uber’s three minutes out.” She left without her champagne flute. I kept it on the mantle, next to Grandma’s photo, where the afternoon light hits it just right.”
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