I picked up the pen. Aiden smirked, already texting his fiancée under the table. But instead of signing, I slid the deed back toward him, and underneath it, I placed a thin manila envelope I’d been carrying in my purse for three weeks. “Before you sign anything for me, sweetheart,” I said softly, “you should read what’s inside.” He rolled his eyes and tore it open. The color drained from his face one shade at a time. Inside were the deed records — but not the ones he expected. Twelve years ago, when his father got sick, we’d quietly transferred the house into an irrevocable trust. I wasn’t the owner. I never had been. The beneficiary was a children’s grief foundation in his father’s name. I had no legal authority to sell it, and I never had. “Mom… what is this?” he whispered. “That’s the foundation your father started the year you stopped visiting him in the hospital,” I said. “The one you said was ‘a waste of his money.'” His hands started to shake. Then I pulled out the second document — a letter from my attorney. After thirty years of putting every spare dollar into a retirement account Aiden never knew existed, I’d updated my will that morning. Everything I owned, every cent, was now going to that same foundation. “You told me nobody wants a broke widow at Thanksgiving,” I said, standing up and buttoning my cardigan. “Lucky for you, I won’t be broke. And lucky for me, I won’t be at your Thanksgiving.” I left a five-dollar bill on the table for my coffee. As I walked toward the door, I heard him call after me — not ‘Mom,’ not ‘wait,’ just my first name, the way strangers say it. I didn’t turn around. The bell above the diner door rang behind me like the closing note of a song his father used to hum. Outside, the autumn air smelled like rain and freedom. For the first time in forty years, I wasn’t somebody’s wife, somebody’s mother, somebody’s ATM. I was just Eleanor. And Eleanor was finally going home.
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