I set down my napkin and looked at Tyler for a long moment. “Sit down, sweetheart,” I said softly. “Before you embarrass yourself further.” Brenda laughed. “Eleanor, don’t be dramatic. The lawyer already explained — you can’t manage this property anymore. Just sign.” I reached beside my chair and pulled out the manila envelope. “Funny you mention the lawyer. Mr. Hollis called me Tuesday.” Brenda’s smile froze. I slid the first document across the linen tablecloth. “This is the forensic accounting report on the joint account you opened in my name last March, Brenda. Forty-one thousand dollars withdrawn. The bank flagged it. Adult financial exploitation is a Class B felony in this state.” Tyler’s face drained. I slid the second paper. “This is the deed to the farmhouse, transferred eighteen months ago — into an irrevocable trust. Beneficiary: the Walter J. Pierce Foundation for veterans’ housing. I don’t own it anymore. Neither will you. Ever.” The wine glass slipped from Brenda’s hand and rolled. Tyler stammered, “Grandma, wait — we can talk —” I stood, my knees aching the way they always do in November. “Third paper. Restraining order, filed this morning. You have twenty minutes to collect your coats before the deputy I called arrives. He’s a nice young man. His father served with Walter in Vietnam.” My great-granddaughter slipped her tiny hand into mine. Across the table, my son — Tyler’s father — finally spoke, his voice shaking. “Mom. I didn’t know. I swear I didn’t know.” I squeezed his shoulder as I passed. “I know you didn’t, baby. That’s why your name is still in my will.” Tyler was crying now, the deed transfer crumpled in his fist like the worthless paper it always was. I walked out onto the porch Walter built, breathed in the cold apple-smoke air, and for the first time in two years, I felt him standing beside me again.
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