“Eleanor,” I said, sliding the document back untouched, “before you ask me to sign away the tower, you might want to check who actually owns the land underneath it.” Her smile flickered. I opened my leather folio and laid out three documents in a neat row, like I was presenting a load calculation. The first was the original 1962 ground lease for the Whitcomb Tower parcel. The second was a 2019 quitclaim deed. The third was a notarized assignment dated last spring. “The land was never your late husband’s,” I said quietly. “It belonged to a holding trust his father created for his unmarried sisters. When the last aunt passed, the trust dissolved and the parcel went to public auction. A small LLC bought it for eleven point two million.” Her hand stopped moving. “That LLC,” I said, “is mine. I bought it eight months ago, with my own savings and a loan against my engineering firm. David doesn’t even know yet. I wasn’t going to mention it. I was going to let the ground lease quietly renew in your favor, because he loves you, and because I love him.” Eleanor’s wine glass touched the marble with a soft, defeated click. “But since you’ve decided I leave with the dress on my back,” I continued, “let me be clear. On October first, the ground lease expires. I am under no obligation to renew it. The Whitcomb Tower will either pay my LLC fair market rent — roughly four times what you’ve been paying the old trust — or the tenants receive non-renewal notices and the building becomes a very expensive empty monument to your manners.” David walked in from the garden then, car keys in hand, confused by the silence. I stood, kissed his cheek, and picked up my folio. “Your mother and I were just discussing the family real estate,” I said. “She has until Friday to decide how she’d like to be spoken to going forward.” Eleanor never poured a second glass. The amendment was shredded by morning, and at Thanksgiving she passed me the gravy first, with both hands.
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