My Sister Took The House, But Mom’s Old Will Took It Back In Court-eirian

The room where my mother’s will was read had wood paneling, a pot of bitter coffee, and lighting that made everyone look guilty.

Leah sat beside me with her hands folded over her black dress.

She had cried at the funeral harder than anyone, and I had believed her because I needed to believe grief had left us on the same side.

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Harold Benton, my parents’ longtime attorney, opened the folder and offered the sort of condolences people give when they have said the same words a hundred times and still mean them.

I nodded because I wanted the meeting to be ordinary.

Mom had been ordinary in the best way.

She paid bills the day they arrived.

She kept warranty cards in plastic sleeves.

She labeled the holiday decorations by room and year.

When Dad died of a heart attack five years earlier, she had brought me and Leah to the kitchen table and reminded us that their estate plan split everything equally.

No favoritism, she said.

No fighting.

So when Harold began reading a will that gave Leah the house, the car, the jewelry, and most of the savings, my brain refused to accept the words at first.

It sounded like he had picked up the wrong folder.

Then he said the date.

January fifteenth.

That was not just a date.

That was three days after I drove forty minutes because Mom could not find the remote control sitting in front of her.

That was the same month she called me David, my father’s name, then put a shaking hand over her mouth because she knew something inside her had slipped.

That was after her doctor had already written that major legal decisions should wait until her cognitive state could be assessed.

I looked at Leah.

She looked at the table.

Not at Harold.

Not at me.

At the table, as if the grain in the wood had suddenly become important.

Harold finished reading.

The sentimental items went to me.

Photo albums.

The recipe book.

A jewelry box that sounded generous until I realized the real jewelry had been separated somewhere else.

I heard myself ask whether this was the most recent version.

Harold said it was.

Leah said Mom wanted her to have everything.

Her voice did not break.

Mine almost did.

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