The Cabin He Mocked Held Seven Deeds That Could Kill His $340 Million Resort-olive

Brandon stayed half-standing beside my grandfather’s rocking chair, one hand still hooked around the armrest, his polished shoe planted on the porch board like he needed the wood to hold him upright.

The lake moved behind him in small gray folds. Coffee cooled on the table between us. The folder lay open beside my mug, seven copies of seven deeds arranged in a neat stack, with parcel numbers marked in Thomas Wilder’s blue ink.

Brandon looked from the papers to my face.

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“You read the prospectus,” he said.

Not a question.

I nodded once.

A muscle jumped near his jaw. He tried to smooth it away with that client-meeting smile, the one I had watched him use on nervous couples, retired teachers, widows with savings accounts. It arrived crooked and left fast.

“Claire, this doesn’t have to become hostile.”

“It became hostile when your lawyer called my inheritance negligible.”

His fingers tightened on the rocking chair.

“That was standard language.”

“No. It was convenient language.”

He glanced toward the dirt road, then back at the folder. His eyes were moving too fast now, counting, pricing, measuring. The man who had laughed at the cabin was finally seeing shoreline, access road, drainage corridor, north cove, ridge line.

He was seeing money.

“Scott can make you a generous offer,” he said. “Better than whatever that small-town attorney is telling you.”

I closed the folder.

“You mean Thomas Wilder, the attorney my grandfather trusted for twenty years?”

Brandon’s mouth pressed flat.

“I’m trying to help you.”

The wind pushed the smell of damp pine across the porch. A loose strand of hair stuck to my cheek. I brushed it back with two fingers and stood.

“No, Brandon. You’re trying to enter a room my grandfather locked before you ever found the door.”

For three seconds, neither of us moved.

Then his phone buzzed.

He looked down. One message. The name on the screen was Scott.

I saw it before he turned the phone over.

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