I took the pen. Marcus smirked at Brielle. I clicked it twice, set it down on top of the unsigned papers, and reached into my tote bag for a manila envelope of my own. “Before I sign anything,” I said softly, “I think you should see what Mom mailed me three weeks before she passed.” His smile flickered. Inside the envelope was a handwritten letter, a flash drive, and a notarized addendum to the trust — dated four days after Marcus had called our dying mother a burden over speakerphone. I’d been in the hospice room. She’d heard every word. So had her attorney, who’d driven over that same afternoon. The addendum revoked Marcus’s trusteeship and named me sole executor of the lake house, the Charleston property, and the investment account he’d already been borrowing against. The flash drive held the recording. Marcus’s face went the color of wet cement. “You can’t — that’s not legal, she was on morphine —” “She was lucid,” I said. “Dr. Patel signed an affidavit. So did Pastor Hollis. So did the notary.” Brielle stood up so fast her purse hit the floor. The attorney, who had been quietly watching from the doorway, cleared his throat. “Mr. Whitfield, I was actually about to call you in. There’s the matter of the $186,000 you withdrew against the estate without authorization. We’ll need that returned within thirty days, or the family will be pressing charges.” Marcus opened his mouth. Nothing came out. I picked up his unsigned papers, tore them neatly in half, and slid them back across the table. “The lake house is going to someone who deserves it,” I said, standing. “I’m turning it into a free summer art camp for kids in foster care. Mom’s idea. She wrote it in the letter.” I walked out into the Charleston sunlight, snow still melting off my secondhand coat, and for the first time in eight months, I could breathe.
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