Trevor laughed when he saw the folder. “What’s that, Margaret, your scrapbook of casseroles?” The room chuckled nervously. Aunt Diane, who’d flown in only because she heard the will was being read, leaned forward like a vulture sensing meat. I opened the folder slowly. “Dad asked me to bring these today,” I said. “He told me you’d make a scene before the lawyer arrived. He was right.” I slid the first document across the coffee table. It was the deed to the lake house. Trevor’s smug grin froze when he saw the date: re-titled three years ago, sole owner, Margaret Whitmore. “That’s not possible,” he stammered. I placed the second document beside it. The trust paperwork. Dad had moved every liquid asset, the Greenwich brokerage account, the two rental properties in Asheville, even the vintage Mustang Trevor had been bragging about inheriting, into an irrevocable trust naming me sole trustee. Trevor’s bourbon glass hit the rug. “He was sick, he didn’t know what he was signing!” Aunt Diane hissed. That’s when I pulled out the third document. A notarized letter, in Dad’s shaky but unmistakable handwriting, dated six months before he passed, witnessed by his oncologist and his pastor. I read one line aloud. “Margaret is the only child who showed up. Everything she has, she earned with her hands and her heart.” The room went silent. Trevor lunged for the papers and I calmly stepped back. “The originals are with the attorney,” I said. “He’s pulling into the driveway right now.” Through the window, headlights swept across the snow. Trevor sank onto the couch, white as the tablecloth. I picked up my coffee, took a slow sip, and looked at my brother for the first time all day. “You can keep the bourbon glass, Trev. Dad said you always preferred the shine of things over the weight of them.” Then I walked out to greet the lawyer, the cabin keys warm in my pocket, finally heavy with what they’d always been worth.
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