“Nothing to say?” Vanessa laughed, glancing at her husband Trent for backup. “No tears? No begging?” I set my glass down gently. “Actually, I do have something. I just wanted to wait until everyone was here.” I pulled a slim folder from under my chair. Mom’s attorney, Mr. Halverson, stepped quietly out of the kitchen hallway where he’d been waiting. Vanessa’s wine glass froze halfway to her lips. “Mom asked me to handle this,” I said softly. “Three months ago, after you tried to move her into that discount facility in Phoenix, she revoked the will you helped her draft during her morphine week.” Mr. Halverson nodded and opened his briefcase. “The lake house, the gallery in Savannah, and the trust — all transferred into a living trust two months ago. Your mother is the beneficiary during her lifetime. After that, the entirety passes to the Eleanor Whitfield Hospice Foundation, which your sister founded last spring in your mother’s name.” Vanessa’s face drained of color. “That’s — that’s not legal, she wasn’t competent—” “She was,” Mr. Halverson said calmly. “We have three independent physician evaluations and a notarized video statement. She specifically named you, Vanessa, as a person to be excluded from any inheritance, citing — and I quote — ‘attempted coercion during medical vulnerability.'” Trent slowly put his fork down. Vanessa stood, trembling. “You manipulated her! You poisoned her against me!” I finally looked up. “No, Vanessa. I just answered the phone when she called. I just showed up.” Upstairs, I heard Mom’s little bell — the one I’d taught her to ring when she needed me. I stood, smoothed my hoodie, and walked past my sister without another word. “Excuse me,” I said gently. “My mother is waiting.”
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