I asked Marcus if he’d like coffee before he kept threatening me. He laughed. Claire finally looked up, whispered, “Daddy, just listen to him.” That’s when I knew she wasn’t a hostage. She was a partner. I stood, walked to the sideboard, and pulled out a slim leather folder Eleanor and I had prepared two years before her diagnosis. Inside: a fully executed irrevocable trust, dated 2021, transferring the house, the lake cabin, and the entirety of our investment accounts into the Hensley Family Charitable Trust. Beneficiary: the Savannah Children’s Hospital Engineering Scholarship, in Eleanor’s name. Trustees: my attorney and my younger brother. I owned nothing on paper. Hadn’t for years. “Declare me incompetent all you want, Marcus,” I said. “You’ll be suing a hospital wing full of sick kids.” His face went the color of cold gravy. Then I slid the second folder across the table. Bank statements. Forty-one thousand dollars Claire had quietly moved from my checking account over eighteen months, transferred to a joint account in her and Marcus’s name. “I noticed in March,” I told her. “I let it keep happening so I’d have a pattern.” My attorney already had the report. The DA’s office had a copy by Tuesday. Claire started crying. Marcus started yelling about how I’d “trapped” them, as if stealing from your widowed father was a trap someone set. I walked them both to the door, the same door Eleanor used to hang wreaths on every December. “You’re welcome at her memorial next month,” I said. “Sit in the back. Don’t speak.” Then I closed the door, poured myself a single bourbon, and called the gardener about the magnolias. Six months later, the first Eleanor Hensley Scholarship went to a girl from Tybee Island who wants to build bridges. I sat in the front row in a pressed navy suit, clean-shaven, and for the first time since the funeral, I smiled without it hurting.
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