Brett tapped the papers. “It’s a quitclaim deed, Grandma. The farm, the accounts, the orchard. We’ll handle everything. You just need to sign here, here, and here.” Vivian leaned in, voice syrupy. “Eleanor, sweetheart, you can barely manage the stairs. We’re doing this out of love.” I took a slow sip of tea. “Love,” I repeated. “That’s a generous word for a woman who didn’t come to her own husband’s funeral because the drive was inconvenient.” Vivian’s smile cracked. I reached into the pocket of the flannel and pulled out a different folder. Thinner. Older. I set it next to theirs. “This is the trust my Harold and I set up in 1986. The farm doesn’t belong to me anymore. It belongs to the Hayes Family Agricultural Trust, of which I am one of four trustees.” Brett’s face went the color of skim milk. “The other three,” I continued, “are the foreman who’s worked this land for thirty years, the county land conservancy, and a young woman named Maya, the home health aide who drove four hours through a snowstorm last February when I had pneumonia, while you, Brett, were posting beach photos from Tulum.” Vivian stood up so fast her chair scraped. “You can’t be serious.” “I called my attorney this morning,” I said. “After Brett’s voicemail. The one where he forgot to hang up and told you, and I quote, ‘the old bat won’t know what she’s signing.'” I slid his own papers back across the table. “I do know what I’m signing. Nothing. Ever. To either of you.” Brett opened his mouth. I held up one finger. “There’s a casserole in the fridge. Take it. It’s the last thing from this house you’ll ever receive.” They left without the casserole. Maya came by at six, like she always does. We had pancakes for dinner. I told her about the trust meeting next month. She cried. I poured her tea with hands that, somehow, weren’t trembling anymore.
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