Marcus slid the paper closer. “Just a signature, Mom. Elena understands. Don’t you, sis?” I stood up slowly and walked to the window. “Before she signs anything,” I said, “there’s someone in the hallway who should come in.” The door opened. In walked Mom’s attorney, Ms. Reyes, carrying a leather folder I’d asked her to bring three weeks ago. Marcus’s smile cracked. “What is this?” Ms. Reyes set the folder on the tray table. “Mr. Carter, your mother executed a revocable living trust eighteen months ago, while fully lucid, witnessed and recorded on video. The house, the savings, and your father’s pension were placed into that trust. Elena is the sole trustee and sole beneficiary.” Marcus’s face went gray. “That’s not possible. She would’ve told me.” Mom’s voice came soft but clear from the pillow. “I did tell you, Marcus. The Christmas you didn’t come. I left you three voicemails.” I pulled out my phone and played them, one after another, his own ringtone echoing through the room as the voicemails went unanswered. Then I opened my laptop. “There’s more,” I said. “The forty thousand dollars you ‘borrowed’ for your startup? Mom kept every text. Every promise to pay it back. Ms. Reyes has already filed in small claims.” The notary in the hallway quietly packed his briefcase and left. Marcus lunged for the trust documents, but Ms. Reyes calmly slid them away. “These are certified copies. The originals are in a vault. And Mr. Carter — your mother also recorded a statement this morning, on my advice, requesting that you be removed from her medical visitor list effective immediately. Security is waiting downstairs to escort you out.” Marcus turned to Mom, voice cracking. “Mom, please—” She squeezed my hand and looked at him with the same tired love she’d carried all his life. “I gave you everything for forty years, baby. Elena gave me the last two. It’s her turn.” He left without another word. I climbed back into the recliner, took Mom’s hand, and listened to her breathe until the sun came up.
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