At the Will Reading, My Dead Mother-in-Law Chose Me Over Her So-felicia

James Harlan did not let Ethan’s outrage take over the room.

He adjusted his glasses, looked down at Margaret Caldwell’s will, and read the part everyone had really come for.

Under the Margaret A. Caldwell Living Trust, the residence at 814 Hawthorne Lane in Webster Groves, Margaret Caldwell’s personal investment accounts, and her fifty-one percent controlling interest in Caldwell Home & Lumber are transferred to Claire Caldwell, effective immediately upon my death.

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Ethan made a sound I had never heard from him before.

It wasn’t grief.

It was panic.

Harlan kept reading in that same careful voice.

To my son Ethan, I leave your father’s Omega watch, one dollar, and my sincere hope that you someday learn the difference between being loved and being entitled.

Lauren’s face emptied all at once.

Then came the line that told me Margaret had thought of every person in that room, even the smallest one.

To the child currently in Ms.

Whitaker’s arms, contingent upon confirmed paternity within ninety days, I leave an irrevocable trust for education and medical care in the amount of four hundred thousand dollars.

Neither parent shall control those funds.

The baby fussed softly against Lauren’s chest.

She looked down at him, then back at Ethan like she had just realized she had not been invited there as family.

She had been summoned as a witness.

And then Harlan slid the cream envelope toward me.

The brass key opens the locked drawer in Margaret’s study, he said.

The letter contains instructions. There is also a recorded statement confirming her competency and her intent.

Ethan stood so fast his chair skidded backward over the carpet.

Claire, don’t touch that. Mom was sick.

You know she didn’t mean –

Harlan tapped a second folder.

Your mother anticipated that objection.

Two physicians and a video record say otherwise.

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