The lawyer, Mr. Hassan, arrived exactly on time, shaking snow off his coat. Vivienne practically sprinted to greet him, gesturing toward the drawing room like she already owned it. “We’re ready whenever you are. I’ve prepared a transition plan for the foundation.” Mr. Hassan smiled politely, then turned to me. “Actually, Miss Whitlock asked that we begin with you. She left specific instructions.” Vivienne’s smile cracked. I opened the binder. Inside were three documents Grandma had signed eight months before her passing — notarized, witnessed, ironclad. The first: full transfer of the Whitlock Foundation directorship to me, effective the moment of her death. The second: a revocation of every prior verbal promise made to “any relative who has not contributed labor or capital to the sanctuary in the last five years.” The third made the room go silent. Grandma had quietly sold the Greenwich estate two months ago and placed the entire eleven-million-dollar proceeds into the sanctuary’s endowment. The house Vivienne was standing in? She’d been renting it from the trust since October. “There’s a thirty-day notice in your inbox, Vivienne,” Mr. Hassan said gently. “Your grandmother was very fond of clarity.” Vivienne’s champagne flute hit the marble with a sharp crack. “This is a mistake. She was confused — she loved me—” “She loved who you were at seven,” I said quietly. “Not who you became.” I slid one more envelope across the console table. “Grandma left you this.” Inside was a single photograph: Vivienne at our sanctuary’s grand opening, fifteen years ago, holding a rescued beagle and grinning. On the back, in Grandma’s looping handwriting: “Come back to her someday. The door is open. The checkbook is not.” Vivienne sank onto the bottom stair, pearls trembling at her throat. I picked up my binder, thanked Mr. Hassan, and walked out into the snow. The dogs were waiting to be fed.
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