I didn’t cry. I didn’t argue. I just poured myself a cup of Mom’s chamomile and sat down at the table across from him. ‘Derek,’ I said quietly, ‘do you remember what Mom asked you last Christmas?’ He rolled his eyes. ‘Don’t start with the guilt trip.’ ‘She asked you to co-sign her medical loan. You said, and I quote, that’s what Nora’s for.’ He shrugged. ‘And? She’s dead now. The house is family property.’ I nodded slowly, then slid a manila folder across the table. He opened it, expecting nothing. His face changed on page two. Mom hadn’t just left me the house. Eighteen months ago, when the cancer came back, she’d quietly transferred the deed into a living trust with my name on it. Not a will he could contest. Not a probate he could delay. A trust. Sealed, notarized, and witnessed by her attorney and her priest. Page three was the kicker: a signed letter, in her handwriting, explaining exactly why. ‘To my son Derek, who called twice this year, both times to ask about the house.’ His mouth opened. Nothing came out. Then I placed the last document on top — a printout of the security camera footage from Mom’s front porch. Every visit he’d made in the last three years. Six total. Four of them under twenty minutes. Timestamped. ‘The lawyer has copies,’ I said. ‘So does Aunt Ruth. So does the church. I wasn’t going to share them. I was going to let you keep your story.’ I stood up and opened the back door for him. ‘You can still come to the funeral tomorrow, Derek. Mom would’ve wanted that. But you’ll sit in the back. And you won’t speak.’ He left without his coat. I locked the door, turned off the porch light, and finally, finally, let myself cry — not for him, but for the woman upstairs who had seen him clearly, and loved me loud enough to prove it.
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