Brittany marched closer, Trey smirking behind her with a beer at 9 a.m. “David would’ve wanted his BLOOD family here,” she hissed. “You were married eight years. We were his blood for thirty-two.” I nodded slowly. “You’re right, Brittany. Blood matters. Which is why I waited until today.” I set my mug down on the porch rail and pulled the manila folder from inside the screen door. Her eyes flicked to it. “What’s that?” “David’s updated will. The one he signed six months before the diagnosis. The one your mother told the lawyer didn’t exist.” Her face went the color of skim milk. I opened it slowly, like I was unwrapping a gift. “The house isn’t in the family trust, Brit. David took it out two years ago when your brother tried to refinance it behind his back. It’s in MY name. Solely. Has been since 2022.” Trey lowered his beer. Brittany laughed, but it cracked in the middle. “You’re bluffing.” I held up the second document. “This is the thirty-day notice to vacate. Already filed with the county this morning. Sheriff Daniels signed off as a favor — he and David played hockey together, remember?” Her three kids peeked from the upstairs window. The yappy dogs went silent like even they could feel it. “You can’t do this to family,” she whispered. I stepped closer, close enough she could see my eyes weren’t wet anymore. “Family doesn’t change the locks on a widow’s bedroom, Brittany. Family doesn’t sell her husband’s tools on Marketplace before the funeral flowers wilt. Family doesn’t call her a renter in the house she paid the mortgage on for eight years.” I tucked the folder back under my arm. “You have until the end of the month. Take the dogs. Leave the key David carved your name into when you were nine — that one stays with me.” She opened her mouth. Nothing came out. I picked up my coffee, walked back inside MY house, and locked the door behind me. For the first time in three weeks, the silence sounded like David smiling.
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