I picked up the pen. Vanessa smirked at Marcus. I clicked it twice, set it down beside the deed, and slid my phone across the granite instead. “Before I sign anything,” I said softly, “you should listen to this.” I tapped play. Mom’s voice filled the kitchen, thin but unmistakable, recorded three weeks before she passed. “Hannah, sweetheart, the attorney just left. Everything is in the trust now. The house, the land, Grandpa’s coin collection, all of it. Vanessa and Marcus get exactly what they earned, which is the contents of the garden shed. I’m sorry I didn’t tell them sooner. I wanted to see who’d show up at the end.” Vanessa’s face went the color of skim milk. Marcus actually laughed, the nervous kind, until I slid the second document across, a certified letter from Whitaker & Klein, dated two months ago, naming me sole trustee and beneficiary. “The deed you printed isn’t valid,” I said. “Mom hasn’t owned this house outright since 2022. The trust does. And I am the trust.” Vanessa lunged for the paper. I lifted it gently out of reach. “You can still come to the funeral,” I added. “Mom wanted you there. But the eulogy slot? She asked me to read a letter she wrote. To both of you. About the birthdays you missed. The hospital nights. The Christmas she spent alone because you were in Aspen.” Marcus sat down hard on a barstool. Vanessa whispered, “You wouldn’t.” I smiled for the first time in a week. “I won’t have to. Her words will.” I walked them to the door in silence, handed Vanessa the garden shed key, and locked the deadbolt behind them. Then I went back to the recliner where Mom died, sat down in the dark, and finally, finally let myself cry. Not from grief. From the sound of a door closing on people who never deserved the key.
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