“Before I sign anything,” I said quietly, “I’d like the room to hear something.” I slid a small recorder onto the table and pressed play. Margaret’s voice filled the office, thin but unmistakable, recorded three weeks before she passed. “Brielle came by today asking me to change the will. She said Hannah was stealing from me. I told her Hannah is the only person who ever showed up without being paid to. I’m leaving it the way it is. And if Brielle contests it, play her this.” Brielle’s face drained of color. The lead attorney, Mr. Ellison, cleared his throat and opened a second envelope I hadn’t seen before. “Mrs. Whitfield also filed an addendum,” he said. “In the event of any challenge by her biological daughter, the contested portion transfers entirely to Hannah Reyes, along with the lake house in Kerrville and the trust originally earmarked for Brielle’s children’s tuition.” Brielle shot up so fast her chair scraped. “That’s insane! She wasn’t in her right mind!” Ellison didn’t blink. “Two physicians and a notary disagree. It’s airtight.” I finally looked at her. Six years of silent dinners, of being called the help, of biting my tongue while she mocked my accent at Thanksgiving. “Margaret asked me one thing before she died,” I said. “She asked me to be kind to you anyway.” I slid an envelope across the table. “There’s a check inside. Ten thousand dollars. Same number you offered me. Consider it a parting gift from the janitor’s daughter.” Brielle’s hands trembled as she opened it. The memo line read: For humility lessons. I stood, picked up my folder, and walked out into the Texas evening. For the first time in six years, the air tasted like mine.
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