I walked past her, past the cousins filming on their phones, past David’s mother who wouldn’t meet my eyes, and pulled a manila folder from the drawer beneath the bread box. The drawer David always called “Maggie’s boring papers drawer.” Vivienne snorted. “Oh, please. If you think a prenup is going to save you—” “It’s not a prenup,” I said quietly. I slid the first document across the granite. “It’s the original deed. The lake house was never David’s. He bought it from my grandfather in 2009, then transferred it into a trust in my name in 2014, after your husband tried to mortgage it behind his back.” The kitchen made a sound like air leaving a tire. I laid down the second page. “This is the Range Rover title. Mine. Bought with the royalties from the children’s books I write under a pen name — the ones your daughter reads, Vivienne.” The third page. “This is David’s will, updated in March. He left the boat to the veterans’ shelter where we volunteered every Saturday. The one you said sounded depressing.” I finally looked up. Vivienne’s mouth was open, lipstick smudged at the corner. “And this,” I said, sliding the last document forward, “is a notice from the estate attorney. David also left a letter. He asked me to read one line aloud, in front of everyone, if this exact moment ever happened.” I unfolded it. My voice did not break. “‘Vivienne, the only charity case in this family was the patience my wife showed you. Please leave her house by sunset.'” The silence was the loudest thing I’d ever heard. I walked to the front door and opened it wide. One by one, they filed out — cousins, aunts, the mother-in-law who finally, finally met my eyes and whispered, “I’m sorry.” Vivienne was last. At the threshold she hissed, “You’ll regret this.” I smiled, for the first time in nine days. “No, Vivienne. He already made sure I wouldn’t.” Then I closed the door, locked it, and for the first time since the funeral, I cried in a house that was finally, fully, undeniably mine.
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