I picked up the pen. Brittany’s smile widened. Tyler exhaled like a man finally off the hook. Then I set the pen back down and folded my hands. “Before I sign anything,” I said, “I’d like to read you something Walter wrote.” I pulled a worn envelope from my cardigan pocket. Brittany’s smile twitched. Inside was a letter dated three weeks before Walter passed, and a copy of the deed — the real one. “Walter put the lake house into an irrevocable trust last spring,” I said. “I’m not the owner anymore. I’m just the lifetime resident. The trustee is our granddaughter Maya.” Tyler’s spoon stopped clinking. Maya — twenty-two, the one Brittany had called “the weird art school kid” at every family dinner — was the only grandchild who’d visited Walter in hospice. Every single weekend. “Walter heard you, Brittany,” I continued. “Last Christmas, on the porch, when you told Tyler the lake house was ‘basically already yours’ and you’d flip it the second I was gone. He was in the hammock around the corner.” Brittany’s face drained of color. “He changed everything that January.” I slid the developer’s business card — the one I’d found in Tyler’s truck — across the table. “Maya called your buyer yesterday. Told him the property isn’t for sale. Won’t ever be.” Tyler finally looked up. “Mom—” “I’m not finished.” I stood, smoothed my cardigan. “Maya’s moving in next month. She’s turning the boathouse into her studio. You’re both welcome here, anytime, as guests. But the papers you brought?” I picked up the stack and dropped it in the recycling bin by the door. “Walter already answered them.” Brittany grabbed her purse. Tyler stayed seated, staring at the coffee his father bought the mugs for. “He loved you, Tyler,” I said softly. “He just didn’t trust her. And by the end — neither did you, did you?” He didn’t answer. He didn’t have to. The lake outside caught the morning light, and for the first time since Walter died, the house felt like ours again.
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