I didn’t argue. I just walked to the mantel, lifted down the small cedar box Grandma always kept beside her reading glasses, and set it gently on the table. Vanessa smirked. “Oh, sweetie, if that’s supposed to be some sad little keepsake speech—” “It’s not,” I said. “It’s the deed.” The room went still. I opened the box and slid out the crisp folder Ruth’s attorney had given me eighteen months earlier, the day after Vanessa called Grandma “a stubborn old bat” for refusing to sell the property. Ruth had transferred the lake house into my name that same afternoon. Not in the will. Not something anyone could contest. A living gift, notarized, witnessed by her doctor and her pastor. Vanessa’s face drained. “That’s — that’s not legal, she wasn’t in her right mind—” “She was,” said a voice from the doorway. Dr. Halloran, Grandma’s physician of twenty years, stepped in holding his own folder. “I signed a competency evaluation the morning of the transfer. Ruth was sharper than most of the people in this room.” Uncle Ray cleared his throat. “Vanessa, sit down.” But I wasn’t finished. I pulled out one more envelope — the letter Ruth had written me the night she signed the deed. I read only the last line aloud. “The house goes to the girl who stayed. Everything else goes to whoever proves they loved me without asking what I’d leave behind.” I looked around the table at the cousins who hadn’t called in years, the aunt who’d texted asking about the silver, Vanessa still frozen with her wine. “The rest of the estate,” I said quietly, “is being donated to the foster care program that placed me with this family. Grandma set it up last spring.” Vanessa dropped her glass. It didn’t shatter — just rolled, spilling red across the deed she’d never touch. I picked up the flag, walked out onto the porch, and finally let myself cry where Ruth used to watch the loons come in at sundown.
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