I set the casserole down on the sideboard very gently, because if I had set it down hard I would have shattered. Brynn was curled on the loveseat scrolling her phone, already wearing Mom’s pearl earrings. Marcus kept talking. “Be reasonable, Liza. You’re single. Brynn has the twins. The lake house should go to a real family.” I let him finish. Then I opened my tote bag and pulled out the navy folder Mom’s attorney had handed me the morning she died. “Mom asked me to wait until after the burial,” I said. “She wanted you both to show me who you were first.” Marcus’s smile flickered. Brynn finally looked up. Inside the folder was a revised trust, signed and notarized eight months ago, witnessed by her hospice nurse and her priest. The lake house, the brokerage account, the Charleston rental — all placed into a trust with me as sole trustee. Marcus and Brynn were named as beneficiaries of exactly one item each: the bourbon decanter in his hand, and the pearl earrings in hers. “She said you’d already taken everything else from her in advance,” I read aloud, my voice steady for the first time in years. “The Venmo transfers, Marcus. The credit card you opened in her name, Brynn. She knew.” Marcus set the bourbon down so fast it sloshed. Brynn started crying the loud, performative way she cried as a child when she wanted dessert. I picked up the casserole again, because Mrs. Hollis had made it with love and someone in this house deserved love tonight. “You can stay until Sunday,” I told them. “After that, the locks change. The decanter and the earrings will be couriered to your addresses.” I walked past Marcus into the kitchen, set the dish in the oven, and finally — finally — let myself cry. Not for the house. For the eleven years I’d spent believing quiet love was invisible. Mom had seen me the whole time.
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