I stood up slowly and walked to my purse on the side table. Marcus snorted. “Going to cry in the bathroom again, El?” I pulled out a manila envelope instead and slid it across the table to my mother. “Open it.” She rolled her eyes but tore the seal. Her face changed the moment she saw the letterhead. Bauer & Lin, Estate Attorneys. “Dad’s will included a contingency clause,” I said. “If any heir attempted to pressure, coerce, or threaten me regarding the property, full ownership of his retirement accounts, his classic car collection, and the lake cabin would transfer to me as well. Not split. Transferred. I filed the petition this morning.” Tasha stopped filming. Marcus’s smile slipped sideways. “You’re bluffing,” Mom whispered. I placed a second document on top. “That’s the court stamp. And this,” I tapped Tasha’s phone, “is going to be Exhibit B. Thank you for recording.” Marcus stood up so fast his chair tipped. “Mom, do something!” But Mom was staring at the line item that said lake cabin, the one she’d been bragging to her church friends about inheriting for fifteen years. “Eleanor, sweetheart,” she tried, voice suddenly syrupy, “we were only joking, you know how Marcus is —” “I know exactly how Marcus is,” I said. “I’ve been paying for how Marcus is since I was nineteen.” I picked up my coat. “The locks on the Craftsman were changed Tuesday. The cabin keys are with my attorney. And Mom, the four hundred a month I send for your prescriptions? That ends tonight. You have a son now. Let him handle it.” I walked to the door. Behind me, Marcus was shouting, Tasha was crying about her followers, and Mom was calling my name in a register I hadn’t heard since I was eight and useful. I didn’t turn around. Dad always said the quiet ones keep the receipts. I just hadn’t realized, until that moment, how heavy a folder full of them could feel — or how light I’d be once I finally set it down.
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