Her New Family Wanted Her Property, But Vancouver Had Receipts-olive

When I married Graham at sixty-three, people called it brave.

I never liked that word for second marriages.

Brave made it sound like I was marching into battle instead of walking slowly into a chapel in North Vancouver while rain tapped the stained-glass windows and my daughter tried not to cry.

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I wore cream silk, low heels, and the pearl earrings Thomas had given me on our twentieth anniversary.

White would have felt false.

Cream felt like the truth.

It was soft, warm, and slightly weathered by time, which was exactly how I felt standing there with Claire beside me, my fingers aching inside her grip.

“Mom,” she whispered, “Thomas would want you happy.”

I nodded because I believed that.

I also believed Thomas would have wanted me careful.

My first husband had been gentle, but he had not been naive.

Thomas and I had built our life in layers, never quickly, never loudly, always with receipts.

The first condo had been a terrifying purchase when we were younger, the kind of decision that made us eat soup for dinner for months because every extra dollar went into repairs.

Then came the second.

Then the third.

By the time Thomas died, we owned enough waterfront property that several men in suits started treating me with a new kind of respect, the kind that never quite reaches the eyes.

I learned to read that respect.

I learned the difference between admiration and appetite.

After Thomas was gone, Claire helped me put everything in order.

There were property tax notices, strata minutes, insurance schedules, lease renewals, and Land Title records arranged in a blue binder that lived inside a safe no one saw unless I trusted them with more than my heart.

The eight luxury condominiums along the Vancouver waterfront were mine.

They were not Graham’s.

They were not Claire’s yet, though my estate documents made clear what would happen when my time came.

They were certainly not the inheritance plan of three men I had met after sixty.

Graham knew I owned the two-bedroom waterfront condo where we planned to live.

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