She Got the Mocked Cabin, Then Found What Her Sister Never Knew-thuyhien

Megan smiled when the lawyer read the will.

That was the first thing I remember clearly after my father’s funeral.

Not the flowers.

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Not the casseroles.

Not the rain tapping the dining room windows like nervous fingers.

Megan’s smile.

It spread slowly across her face when Robert Chen announced that she had inherited the Miami apartment.

The apartment had a view, a doorman, and enough market value to make half the relatives in that dining room sit up straighter.

Then Robert turned the next page.

“And to my daughter, Claire,” he read, “I leave the family cabin and the two hundred acres surrounding it in the Adirondacks.”

I did not move.

I was still in uniform, because I had flown straight from Fort Bragg to Albany and barely made it in time for the funeral.

My duffel was by the wall.

My boots still had airport dust on them.

My father’s house smelled like lilies, reheated coffee, and the kind of grief people try to feed you in foil-covered pans.

Across the table, Megan tilted her head.

“A cabin fits you perfectly, you stinking woman.”

Nobody laughed.

That almost made it worse.

If they had laughed, I could have hated the whole room cleanly.

Instead, everyone just pretended they had not heard.

My aunt stared into her coffee.

One cousin suddenly became fascinated with the pattern on his paper plate.

Robert Chen cleared his throat and looked down at the file.

My mother, Helen, folded her hands in her lap so tightly her knuckles turned white.

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