A Birthday Cake, A Forged Deed, And The Widow Who Let Them Celebrate First-eirian

Diana read her name on the eviction notice three times before she understood it.

Her fork was still hanging in the air, a cube of roasted carrot trembling on the silver tines. The birthday candles behind the forged transfer request had burned low, leaving small black curls in the frosting. No one sang anymore. No one lifted a glass.

Chris was standing so close to the wall that the framed photo of his father brushed his shoulder.

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Mr. Lowell did not raise his voice.

“Mrs. Martha Ellison is the sole legal owner of this property. Any attempt to transfer, borrow against, or encumber it without her consent is now under county review.”

Betty gave a small laugh, but it came out dry.

“This is ridiculous. Family paperwork gets messy all the time.”

The county fraud investigator turned one page over with two fingers.

“Not usually with a copied signature, a false witness line, and a loan packet submitted at 11:36 p.m. from a home computer.”

Chris’s face changed again.

Not guilt first.

Calculation.

His eyes went toward Diana, then the hallway, then my purse hanging on the back of my chair. The same purse where he thought I kept my Social Security card because I had been careless once in 2018 after cataract surgery.

I watched my son look for an escape route inside my own dining room.

Diana lowered the fork at last. It tapped the plate with a sound tiny enough to hear.

“Martha,” she said, suddenly soft. “You can’t do this on my birthday.”

I looked at the cake. Pink icing. Gold candles. My good porcelain platter underneath it.

“You planned to take my house on a Monday,” I said. “I thought Saturday was generous.”

Betty’s mouth opened.

Chris stepped forward.

“Mom, we were trying to help you manage things. You’re sixty-three. The house is too much for you.”

Mr. Lowell slid another folder across the table.

“Christopher, the home-equity application listed your mother as cognitively impaired. That phrase appears twice.”

The room shifted.

Diana’s cousin stopped recording with her phone. Betty placed one hand flat on the table, fingers spread, red nails shining under the chandelier.

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