I slid the folder back across the laminate table without opening it. Brandon’s jaw tightened. “Mom, don’t make this difficult. The market’s hot. Marcus has debts. We’re family.” I took a slow sip of cold coffee and smiled the way their father used to smile right before he closed a deal. “Funny you should mention family,” I said. “Because I had lunch last Tuesday with Eleanor Whitfield.” Tiffany’s face went the color of the napkin in her lap. Eleanor was the senior partner at Whitfield and Cross, the estate firm that had been handling our family trust since 1981. “Eleanor helped me restructure everything in February,” I continued. “The house on Linden Street, your father’s patent royalties, the lake cabin, the brokerage accounts. All of it moved into an irrevocable trust. The beneficiaries are the Asheville Children’s Literacy Foundation and my three grandchildren, with distributions held until they each turn twenty-five.” Marcus actually laughed, the nervous kind. “You can’t be serious. We’re your sons.” “I am serious,” I said. “And you stopped being my son the day you told your daughter I wasn’t welcome at her birthday party because I might embarrass you in front of your boss.” I turned to Brandon. “And you, sweetheart. The recording app on my phone has been on this entire dinner. Eleanor asked me to bring her any evidence of coercion. She said elder financial abuse carries up to ten years in North Carolina.” Tiffany grabbed her purse so fast her chair scraped. I reached into my own bag and laid down a crisp white envelope. “This is for the waitress. She’s been refilling my coffee for forty minutes while you three planned my funeral.” I stood, smoothed my cardigan, and looked down at the three of them. “I’m not moving into a nursing home, Brandon. I’m moving to Lisbon for the summer. Your father always wanted to see it.” I left the folder on the table and walked out into the warm Carolina evening, lighter than I’d felt in twenty years.
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