Trevor sighed like I was the inconvenience. ‘Mom, it’s standard. Just sign.’ I flipped through the pages slowly. Quitclaim deed. Power of attorney. A transfer of Dad’s pension survivor account into a ‘family trust’ with Brittany as trustee. They hadn’t just come for the house. They’d come for everything. I looked up and smiled the way I used to smile when Trevor lied about his homework. ‘Sweetheart, can you give me until Friday? I want to make sure I understand.’ Brittany squeezed his arm. ‘Of course, Diane. Take your time.’ They left glowing, already picking out paint colors for my living room. What they didn’t know: three weeks earlier, my doctor had used the word ‘early-stage,’ and I had quietly called the one person Trevor forgot existed. My younger sister Margaret. Estate attorney. Thirty-two years in practice. Friday came. Trevor and Brittany arrived with a notary they’d hired themselves, grinning. Margaret was already at my kitchen table, in a charcoal blazer, with a folder thicker than theirs. ‘Hi Trevor,’ she said. ‘Long time.’ His face went the color of old milk. Margaret slid her own document across. A revocable living trust, signed and witnessed Tuesday. The house, the pension, Dad’s savings bonds, the lake cabin Trevor didn’t even know I still owned — all placed in trust. Sole beneficiary: a scholarship fund in my late husband’s name for first-generation college kids. Trevor’s name appeared exactly once. In the section titled ‘Intentionally Omitted.’ Brittany started to speak. Margaret held up one finger. ‘Elder financial abuse is a felony in this state. We have the original draft you brought Monday. We have the recording your mother made on her phone, which is legal here as a one-party-consent state. We have not decided yet whether to file.’ I stood up. Took off my gardening apron. Folded it neatly. ‘You said I should move somewhere smaller, honey. I am. I’m moving on.’ Trevor whispered, ‘Mom, please.’ I kissed his forehead like he was seven again. ‘I loved you first. I won’t be the one you practice cruelty on last.’ I opened the door. The tomato leaves smelled like summer. They left without the deed, without the pension, without the mother they thought they owned.
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