I set my untouched glass of water on the mantel and walked slowly to the oak desk in the corner — Dad’s desk, the one Brandon used to call “that ugly old thing.” Every head in the room turned. I pulled out a slim manila folder and a small black flash drive. “Brandon,” I said, my voice calmer than I expected, “before you start measuring for new curtains, you should probably hear this.” I pressed play on Dad’s old voice recorder. His voice, thin but unmistakable, filled the room. “If you’re listening to this, Brandon, it means you tried. I changed the trust six months ago. Everything — the house, the cabin, the Mustang, the accounts — goes to Hannah. She earned it. You earned the watch in the top drawer. That’s all.” The bourbon glass slipped slightly in Brandon’s hand. I opened the folder next: signed documents from Dad’s estate attorney, notarized, dated, witnessed by two of the very neighbors standing in the room. Then the receipts — the ones I’d quietly photographed months ago — showing Brandon had already tried to refinance the house using a forged power of attorney. “The attorney has copies,” I added gently. “So does the bank. So does the sheriff, who, by the way, asked me to let him know if you showed up making claims today.” Brandon’s wife took a step away from him. His mouth opened, closed, opened again. Aunt Diane, who’d spent the morning whispering that I was “manipulating a dying man,” suddenly found her shoes very interesting. I walked over, slid the watch into Brandon’s free hand, and closed his fingers around it. “Dad wanted you to have something that reminded you of time,” I said. “He thought maybe you’d finally learn the value of it.” Then I opened the front door — my front door — and held it wide. “You can leave the bourbon. It’s vintage. And it stays with the house.”
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