I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I just nodded once and walked upstairs to the room I’d slept in for six years. Trevor took that as surrender. He spent the next three days hosting his friends, popping champagne on the porch where Dad used to read, laughing about how easy it had been. What Trevor didn’t know was that during Dad’s last lucid month, we had sat together at the kitchen table with Dad’s old attorney, Mr. Halberg. Dad had cried, holding my hand. “Trevor only ever wanted the house,” he whispered. “You gave me my life back.” The deed Trevor was waving around? Signed three years earlier, while Dad was already deep in dementia — legally void. The real, notarized will, witnessed by Dad’s doctor and Mr. Halberg, left the house, the eighteen acres, and the trust to me. Sunday morning, Mr. Halberg arrived with a sheriff’s deputy and a certified copy. Trevor’s face drained as the attorney read the date stamps aloud. Brittany dropped a box of Dad’s watches. “This is a mistake,” Trevor sputtered. “Dad loved me.” Mr. Halberg slid a second envelope across the table — a handwritten letter from Dad, dated the week before he died. Trevor read it. His hands started shaking. The letter ended with one line: “Margaret stayed. You didn’t. Be a better man than I raised you to be.” I didn’t evict him out of cruelty. I gave him until Sunday — the same deadline he’d given me. As his car pulled down the gravel drive, Brittany screaming in the passenger seat, I walked back into Dad’s study, sat in the leather chair, and finally let myself cry. Not for the house. For the father who saw me, even when he couldn’t remember my name.
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