Sign the house over to me by Friday, Mom, or I swear I’ll put

I walked to the hallway desk, opened the drawer — and instead of glasses, I picked up a slim leather folder I’d prepared three weeks ago. See, Daniel didn’t know I’d noticed the missing checks. Or the forged power-of-attorney he tried to file in October. Or the voicemail Brittany accidentally left on my landline, laughing about “the dementia angle.” I walked back, sat down, and slid the folder across the table. “Before I sign anything, honey, read that.” Daniel opened it. His face went the color of skim milk. Inside: a notarized cognitive evaluation from Johns Hopkins dated last Tuesday — “patient demonstrates exceptional clarity, memory, and judgment.” Behind it, a fraud report already filed with the state attorney general, case number highlighted. Behind that, a new deed — the house transferred six months ago into an irrevocable trust naming my granddaughter Lily, his daughter from his first marriage, the one he and Brittany pretend doesn’t exist. Brittany’s phone clattered onto the tile. “You— you can’t—” “I already did,” I said quietly. “Lily turns eighteen in March. The trust pays her tuition. There’s a clause, Daniel. If either parent contests it, the trustee — my attorney — is instructed to release the voicemail, the forged POA, and the bank records to the district attorney.” I took a sip of tea. “You wanted the house by Friday. You’ll be off my property by Friday. The locksmith comes at nine tomorrow morning. Your key won’t work after that.” Daniel started to cry — the same wobble he used at seven when he broke a window and blamed the neighbor. I felt nothing. I’d spent that love already, decades ago, on a little boy who no longer existed. At the door, I handed him a small cardboard box: his baby photos, his father’s watch, and a Post-it in my handwriting. It read: “I raised a son. I will not be buried by him. — Mom.” Then I closed the door, locked it, and finally — for the first time in eleven years — poured myself a second cup of tea.

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