I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I just slid the manila folder I’d brought across the table. “Before you keep planning my eviction,” I said quietly, “you should read what’s inside.” Trevor smirked and flipped it open, expecting maybe a sentimental letter. Instead, he found the deed to the house — transferred into my name eighteen months ago. Underneath that, a notarized power of attorney. Underneath that, Mom’s revised will, witnessed by her oncologist and her pastor, leaving the entire estate to me, with one line specifically naming Trevor: “To my son Trevor, who could not find the time, I leave the lessons he refused to learn.” Brittany’s butter knife clattered onto the plate. “This is forged,” Trevor hissed, his ears going red. I pulled out my phone and played a voice memo Mom had recorded the week before she passed, her thin voice steady: “Hannah, baby, you gave me my last good year. Don’t let them bully you out of the home you earned.” Then I slid one more document across the table — an itemized invoice for the seven months of in-home caregiving I’d provided, at market rate. Forty-three thousand dollars. “You offered to split things fairly,” I said. “This is your half of the care she needed while you were golfing in Scottsdale. Pay it, or get out of her kitchen.” Trevor stood up so fast his chair tipped. Brittany grabbed her purse, mumbling about “family being family.” I walked them to the door in the same gray cardigan, the same cold coffee waiting on the table. Before I closed it, I said, “Mom told me something else on that recording, Trev. She said you’d show up for the house and not for her. I told her she was wrong.” I shut the door. Then, for the first time in seven months, I sat down on her old floral couch, pulled her quilt over my legs, and finally let myself cry — not because I’d lost her, but because she’d believed in me right to the end.
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