“Okay,” I said softly. “I’ll sign whatever you want. But there’s something in the study you should see first.” Vanessa rolled her eyes and followed me down the hallway, Trevor trailing behind with that smug little grin he’d worn since we were kids. I opened Mom’s rolltop desk and pulled out a thick manila envelope. Inside was a letter, notarized, dated eight months ago, along with a flash drive. “Mom asked me to give this to you both after she was gone,” I said. “She said you’d know when the moment was right. I think this qualifies.” Vanessa snatched the letter. Her eyes moved across the page, and I watched the color drain out of her face in real time. Trevor leaned over her shoulder, and his grin collapsed like a bad soufflé. The letter explained that Mom had quietly transferred the house into an irrevocable trust two years ago, with me as sole trustee and beneficiary, contingent on one condition: that I remain her primary caregiver until her passing. Which I had. Every night. Every dose. Every hospital run. The flash drive contained video messages Mom had recorded on her tablet, timestamped, describing exactly how Vanessa had screamed at her over the phone about “wasting inheritance on hospice,” and how Trevor had asked, three weeks before she died, if he could “borrow” against her life insurance. “You,” Vanessa whispered, “you knew this whole time?” I shrugged. “I knew Mom loved you. I hoped you’d show up. You didn’t.” Trevor started stammering about “family” and “fairness.” I walked to the front door and opened it. “Mom’s lawyer will be in touch about the memorial fund she left in your names,” I said. “Twenty dollars each. She was very specific.” Vanessa’s heels clicked out first, fast and furious. Trevor followed, mumbling. I closed the door, leaned against it, and finally, for the first time in four years, I let myself cry. Not from grief. From relief. Mom had seen everything. And she’d made sure the only person who stayed, got to stay.
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