“Tyler,” I said softly, reaching into my purse for the cream-colored folder I’d tucked beside my reading glasses, “before you finish that ultimatum, I have something to share with the family.” Brittany rolled her eyes. “Oh God, here comes the guilt trip.” I slid the folder across the linen tablecloth toward my younger son, Daniel, the one Tyler had spent years calling “the failure” because he became a high school music teacher instead of a hedge fund analyst. “Daniel, honey, would you read the first page out loud?” Daniel’s hands shook as he opened it. “It’s… a deed transfer. The Maplewood house. Dated three weeks ago. In my name.” The room went silent. Tyler’s fork clattered. “What? Mom, you can’t — that house is worth one point four million!” I took a slow sip of water. “I know exactly what it’s worth, sweetheart. I also know what it’s worth to a man who drove four hundred miles every weekend last year to sit with me through chemo while you were in Aspen.” Brittany’s face drained. “Chemo? What chemo?” “The chemo none of you asked about,” I said. “The chemo Daniel paid for the co-pays on with his teacher’s salary while you two were demanding I co-sign your pool loan.” Tyler stood up, knuckles white on the chair. “You’re being manipulated. He turned you against us.” I finally let myself laugh — a small, tired sound. “No, Tyler. You did that yourself the moment you told my grandson to call Daniel ‘Uncle Loser’ at his birthday party. I heard you in the hallway.” I turned to little Mason, still gripping my sleeve. “Sweetheart, go get your overnight bag. You’re spending Thanksgiving at Uncle Daniel’s tonight. He’s making pie.” Mason bolted up, beaming. Tyler shouted that I’d regret this, that I was a bitter old woman, that he’d contest everything. I just stood, kissed Daniel’s forehead, and walked toward the door I’d painted myself in 1994. “Lock up when you leave, Tyler,” I said without turning. “You have until Sunday. The new owner is very particular about his floors.”
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