I asked Tyler if he remembered the summer he was nine, when his mother left him with me for three months and never came back for Christmas. He rolled his eyes and told Brent to hurry up. So I slid a folder across the table, right on top of his deed transfer. Inside were twelve years of receipts. Braces. Private school tuition. The car I bought him at sixteen. The bail I posted at nineteen. The rehab in Arizona at twenty-two. The down payment on his first condo. Every single check written from my account, every single one signed by me, totaling four hundred and eighteen thousand dollars. Underneath the receipts was a promissory note. Tyler had signed it at twenty-four, drunk on gratitude, promising to repay me if he ever tried to place me in a facility against my will. His lawyer’s face went gray. Tyler laughed and said no judge would enforce a napkin agreement. That’s when my own attorney, Margaret, walked out of the pantry where she’d been quietly sipping coffee for the last twenty minutes. She introduced herself, then introduced the recording device on the counter, the one that had captured every word about Medicaid fraud, coerced signatures, and elder intimidation. She told Tyler he had two choices. Sign a full repayment plan for the four hundred eighteen thousand, plus interest, or she’d file the recording, the note, and a criminal complaint by Monday morning. Brent excused himself so fast he left his briefcase. Tyler sat down slowly in the chair he’d once done homework in. I refilled his tea and told him the house wasn’t wasted on one old woman. It was earned by one. He signed the repayment plan in silence. Before he left, I handed him the blue cup to keep. I told him it was the only inheritance he had left, and he’d better learn to hold it carefully.
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