She Wanted His Estate, But His Record Was Not For Sale At Mediation-eirian

The office smelled like carpet cleaner and old coffee.

That is the first thing I remember, before the papers, before the threat, before the way Diane’s face changed when the right page finally came out.

I had expected a coffee shop.

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She had said we should meet in person because there were things to sort out about my father’s estate.

She had said it gently, the way people talk when they want their request to sound like kindness before it becomes a demand.

My father had been dead eleven days.

Eleven days is not enough time to learn how to breathe in a world where your father no longer answers the phone.

It is barely enough time to empty the fridge of sympathy casseroles.

It is not enough time to defend a will.

Diane had been married to him for five years and divorced from him for six.

She had left the house, remarried, stopped calling, and become one of those names that floated at the edge of family stories without belonging to them anymore.

Still, when she called after the funeral, I answered.

Grief makes old politeness feel like duty.

The address she sent was a law office.

When I stepped inside, Diane was already waiting with an attorney beside her and a folder placed in front of the empty chair across the table.

There was no coffee.

There was no private conversation.

There was a settlement packet.

Her attorney introduced himself and began explaining unresolved matters from the marriage.

He spoke in the careful, polished way of someone trying to make a grab sound like a process.

Diane had a claim, he said.

She believed my father had promised her a share of the house even after the divorce.

She believed some accounts had not been divided fairly.

She believed I should sign an agreement releasing a large portion of the estate to her before things became unpleasant.

I kept looking at her hands.

They were folded on the table, calm and pale, as if she were asking me to pass the salt.

Then she said the sentence that stayed with me.

She said that if I did not sign over her share, they would tell the court I had stolen from a dead man.

For a second I did not understand the room I was in.

My father had worked nights when I was a teenager.

He left notes on the counter because notes were what his schedule allowed.

Dinner in the fridge.

Picked up your dry cleaning.

Good game last week.

They were not speeches.

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