I didn’t raise my voice. I just opened the folio. “Dad anticipated this,” I said softly. Brianna laughed, a sharp brittle sound. “Anticipated what? You manipulating a dying man? Daniel is the firstborn son. That house, the accounts, the company shares, they belong to us.” I slid the first document across the small mahogany table where the condolence cards were stacked. It was a notarized cognitive assessment dated three weeks before Dad passed, signed by two independent physicians. He had been sharper than anyone in this room. The second document was a video file on a tablet Dad’s attorney had prepped. I pressed play. There was my father, gaunt but smiling, looking straight into the camera. “Brianna, sweetheart, if you’re watching this, it means you did exactly what I told Eleanor you would do.” Brianna’s face drained of color. Dad continued, calm as a Sunday morning. “I’ve left the house, the savings, and my majority shares in Hollings Textiles to Eleanor, who earned every brick of it. To you and Daniel, I leave the contents of safety deposit box 412.” Daniel finally looked up, hopeful. The attorney stepped forward and placed a small velvet pouch on the table. Brianna tore it open. Inside were two items: a handwritten note that read *Try kindness next time,* and a single dollar bill, folded into a tiny origami crane. The parlor went absolutely silent. Brianna’s mouth opened and closed like a fish gasping on a dock. Daniel sank into a pew and, for the first time since we were children, began to cry, not for the money, I think, but because he finally understood who he’d become. I picked up the folio, kissed Dad’s portrait on the easel, and walked out into the soft autumn light. The Hollings name, he’d told me once, belonged to whoever showed up. I had shown up. And now, finally, so had he.
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