Brandon spread the transfer papers across the table like he was dealing blackjack. The lawyers from his side — two men in suits that cost more than my first car — chuckled at his joke. My own attorney, Diane, didn’t. She just slid a single manila folder toward me and waited. ‘Auntie,’ Brandon sighed, uncapping a pen, ‘just sign where the little flags are. We’ll get you home before your stories start.’ I opened the folder instead. ‘Brandon, sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before I sign, I’d love for everyone to see the quarterly numbers you’ve been emailing me.’ He froze. Because those weren’t the real numbers. For eighteen months, Brandon had been forwarding me doctored statements — hiding the fact that he’d been quietly funneling mill contracts to a shell company in his girlfriend’s name. What he didn’t know was that Earl, before he passed, had installed a forensic accountant on the board. A woman named Diane. My Diane. I turned the folder around. Bank transfers. Forged invoices. A photograph of Brandon shaking hands with the buyer he swore didn’t exist. The room went so quiet I could hear the radiator tick. ‘The mill isn’t being transferred today,’ I said gently. ‘It’s being placed in a trust for the forty-two employees who actually showed up every winter Earl was sick. You stocked my pantry with cookies, honey. They stocked our family’s legacy with their backs.’ Brandon’s pen hit the table. ‘You can’t — Aunt Mae, I’m blood —’ ‘So was Earl,’ I said. ‘And he watched you laugh at his funeral.’ The senior partner cleared his throat and asked Brandon to please collect his things. As security walked him to the elevator, I unwrapped a peppermint, slid it across the table to Diane, and signed the only paper that mattered — the one that made sure no Whitman would ever again mistake patience for weakness.
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