I let the silence stretch until the waiter drifted away. Then I opened my tote bag and pulled out a folder of my own. “Funny you brought paperwork, sweetheart,” I said. “Because I brought some too.” Whitney’s smile flickered. Marcus finally looked up. I laid out three documents, one by one, like I was dealing cards at Frank’s old poker table. The first was the deed to the craftsman house, already transferred six months ago, into an irrevocable trust benefiting my three grandchildren directly, with distributions locked until they turned twenty-five. Whitney’s face went white. “You can’t touch it. Marcus can’t touch it. And neither can I.” The second was a cashier’s receipt. “That thirty-two thousand dollars you ‘borrowed’ last spring for Marcus’s legal fees? I traced every wire. My attorney has too.” The third was a printout of Whitney’s private Facebook group, the one she thought was hidden, where she’d been calling me a senile burden and taking donations from her mommy-influencer followers to “care for her declining mother.” I had eighteen months of screenshots. Marcus made a small broken sound. Whitney lunged for the papers; I slid them back into the folder. “I opened the bakery on Elm Street last Tuesday,” I said quietly. “It’s called Frank’s Girl. Your father’s photograph is on the wall. I wanted to invite you both to the ribbon cutting on Saturday.” I stood, left forty dollars for my untouched eggs, and picked up my tote. “The invitation is rescinded. My attorney will contact you Monday about the thirty-two thousand. And Whitney, darling, if you post one more video pretending to be my caregiver, the screenshots go to every brand sponsoring you.” I walked out into the sunshine. Behind me, I heard Marcus finally say the words I’d waited four years to hear him say to his sister: “What have you done?” I didn’t turn around. For the first time since Frank died, my hands weren’t shaking.
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