I didn’t argue. I just nodded once, the way you nod at a toddler mid-tantrum, and walked past her to the parking lot. Vanessa took my silence as surrender. She always did. By Saturday morning she had already moved three suitcases into the Craftsman, posted a tearful Instagram reel from Mom’s porch swing, and invited our brother Trent—the golden boy who hadn’t visited once in four years—to “come home and heal.” Sunday came. The chapel was full of lilies and people who only knew Mom through Vanessa’s filtered stories. Vanessa stood at the front in a black Valentino dress, dabbing dry eyes, waiting for me to be turned away at the door like she’d threatened. Instead, the funeral director walked straight to her and said, gently, “Ma’am, the family pew is reserved for Ms. Maya Calder and her guests.” Vanessa laughed, sharp. “I am family.” He just held out the seating card with my name on it. Mom had planned every detail six months ago, with me, in a notebook Vanessa never bothered to open. Then the lawyer rose to read a short letter Mom had asked be shared before the eulogy. “To my daughter Vanessa and my son Trent: I loved you. I also saw you. The house, the savings, and my mother’s pearls go to Maya, who chose me on the days no one was watching. To you both, I leave the lake cabin—jointly—so you finally have to learn to share something without an audience.” The room went so quiet I could hear the candles breathe. Vanessa turned to me, mascara finally earning its keep, and hissed, “You planned this.” I leaned in, calm as the hallway I’d lived in for a decade. “No, Nessa. Mom did. I just showed up.” I walked to the podium, set Mom’s wedding ring on the lectern beside her photo, and began the eulogy she had written for herself—in my handwriting, because at the end, her hands had shaken too hard to hold the pen. Vanessa left before the final hymn. The Craftsman’s locks were changed by Monday.
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