Friday came. Derek arrived at noon with his lawyer, a notary, and a bottle of champagne already chilling in a gift bag. He didn’t even take off his sunglasses inside. “Where’s the deed, Hannah? Let’s make this quick. I have a tee time.” I poured him coffee, smiled, and slid a manila folder across the table. He opened it expecting a quitclaim. Instead he found a certified copy of Mom’s revised trust, dated fourteen months earlier, notarized at the hospital the week she regained her speech. The house. Her pension. Dad’s life insurance. All of it placed into an irrevocable trust with one sole trustee and beneficiary: me. Underneath was a second document — a notarized letter from Mom, in her shaky but unmistakable handwriting, stating that any heir who attempted to coerce, threaten, or institutionalize her against her will would be permanently disinherited under the trust’s no-contest clause. Derek’s lawyer read it twice. Then he quietly closed his briefcase and stood up. “I can’t represent you in this,” he said, and walked out. Derek’s face went the color of skim milk. “You tricked her. She wasn’t competent—” I pulled out my phone and played the video. Mom, sitting up in her hospital bed, looking straight at the camera, saying clearly, “Derek has not called me in nine months. Hannah feeds me. Hannah reads to me. The house goes to Hannah.” Then she added, with a small, wicked smile, “Tell your brother I’m not dead yet, sweetheart.” Derek lunged for the folder. I slid it back into the drawer. “You’re welcome at Sunday dinner,” I said. “As a guest.” He didn’t come Sunday. He didn’t come for Christmas. Last month his Porsche got repossessed from the country club parking lot — turns out the suit was financed too. Mom turned seventy-one yesterday. She blew out every candle in one breath. Then she looked at me and whispered, “Best decision I ever made was learning to talk again before he noticed.”
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