I didn’t move. I just smiled the way Dad used to smile right before he corrected a customer’s order without making them feel small. The attorney, Mr. Hale, cleared his throat and adjusted his glasses. “Actually, Trevor, before we proceed, Margaret needs to be the one to open the folder. Per your father’s instructions.” Trevor laughed. “What instructions? Dad and I talked about the bakery for years. He wanted it kept in the family name.” “It will be,” Mr. Hale said gently. “Margaret’s name.” The color drained from Trevor’s face like someone had pulled a plug. I slid the folder toward me and opened it slowly. Inside was a handwritten letter, Dad’s shaky cursive I’d come to know better than my own. “To my Maggie,” it began. “You fed me when I forgot how to chew. You sang to me when I forgot your mother’s name. The bakery is yours, every brick, every recipe, every Saturday morning line out the door. To Trevor, I leave the silver pocket watch he asked about every time he called to see if I’d died yet.” The room went so quiet I could hear the radiator tick. Trevor shot up from his chair. “That’s a forgery! She manipulated him! He had dementia, for God’s sake!” Mr. Hale calmly placed three notarized cognitive evaluations on the table, each dated within Dad’s lucid windows, each signed by two different doctors. “Your father anticipated this reaction,” he said. Then he pulled out one more envelope. “He also left a recording.” Dad’s voice filled the room, thin but certain. “Trevor, if you’re hearing this, you’re fighting your sister over a building you never set foot in. Sit down, son. Take the watch. Learn what time it is.” Trevor sat. I closed the folder, stood up, and finally answered him. “I’ll make that coffee now, Trevor. Decaf. You look like you need to rest.” I walked out into the Georgetown sunlight, the keys to Dad’s bakery warm in my palm, and for the first time in four years, I cried because I wasn’t tired anymore.
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