I pried up the third plank near the stove, exactly where the note’s little arrow pointed. Under it sat a fireproof case, and inside that case, the real will. Not the one the family lawyer read. This one was newer, notarized six weeks before Grandpa died, witnessed by the county judge himself. It left the Greenwich house, the stocks, three commercial properties I never knew existed, and every dollar of Walter’s actual fortune to me. The cabin was only the doorway. The other will, the one Marlene had waved around so proudly, was a decoy Grandpa had drafted on purpose, knowing exactly who would try to grab first. Two weeks later I walked into the reading of the corrected estate at First National. Blake was already there in a new suit, laughing with Marlene about which walls to knock down in Greenwich. The lawyer cleared his throat and slid the notarized document across the table. Blake’s smile cracked in slow motion. Marlene’s coffee cup hit the floor. Excuse me, she whispered, that has to be a mistake. The lawyer said, calmly, it is not. Every asset except the cabin returns to Samuel. Additionally, your grandfather left instructions that any heir who attempted to remove property from the Greenwich residence before probate would forfeit their share of a separate trust. He turned a page. Blake, you emptied the garage on Tuesday. That trust is now Samuel’s as well. I didn’t gloat. I just slid an envelope to each of them, small monthly stipends Grandpa had written in as mercy, if I chose to honor them. I did. Then I drove back to the cabin, lit the woodstove, and finally cried, because I understood. He hadn’t left me a shack. He’d left me the only place quiet enough to hear him say, one last time, I always saw you.
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