When the Deed Hit the Picnic Table, My Sister-in-Law Reached for the Papers-olive

The whole backyard went still.

The only sound left was the grill popping behind my father, a thin black curl of smoke rising past his shoulder while the tongs hung loose in his hand. Thirty relatives stood around paper plates and sweating soda cans, staring at the blue folder I had just opened between the baked beans and the corn.

Tegan’s wineglass hovered near her mouth. Her lipstick had left a red crescent on the rim. For the first time since I had met her, she did not have a prepared sentence.

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Then her eyes dropped to the deed.

“No,” she said, too softly for the woman who had just ordered me out. “No, that’s fake.”

Maverick Jones stepped farther through the side gate, rain-dark denim jacket hanging off his shoulders, court papers in one hand. The neighbors behind the fence leaned closer. My cousin Daniel stopped chewing. My mother pressed one hand against the plastic tablecloth as if the whole yard had tilted.

“It’s not fake,” I said.

Tegan reached for the deed.

I slid my hand over the page before her fingers touched it. The paper was cool under my palm. Her nails scraped my knuckle once, sharp and painted coral.

“Don’t,” I said.

That one word did what yelling never could. She pulled her hand back.

My uncle Steve squinted down at the document. He had barbecue sauce on his thumb and a hot dog going cold in his other hand.

“Olivia Anderson Holdings LLC,” he read. “Manager, Olivia Anderson.”

Aunt Carol made a small sound into her napkin.

Gage stayed on his knees in the grass. His face had gone blotchy, the way it used to when he broke something as a kid and waited for me to take the blame. Beer soaked the dirt beside him from the bottle he had dropped. Foam crawled through the grass.

“Liv,” he said. “Please. Please, just put the folder away.”

I looked at him once.

“You had 30 days to read your notice,” I said. “You used them to lie.”

Tegan found her voice then. It came back louder, cracked at the edges.

“She’s doing this because she’s jealous,” she shouted. “She couldn’t stand seeing us happy. She never wanted Gage to have anything.”

Maverick gave a tired laugh.

“She said the same thing about me in Atlanta,” he said. “Different yard, same act.”

Tegan’s head snapped toward him.

“You keep your mouth shut.”

He unfolded the papers in his hand with slow, rough fingers. Grease stains sat under his nails. A faint scar crossed one knuckle.

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