The Hidden Probate Document That Made Her Cousin Stop Smiling-eirian

The courthouse smelled like wet wool, printer toner, and old fear.

Hannah Price noticed the smell before she noticed the way her cousin Bria was smiling at her from across the hallway.

It was raining that Thursday morning, the kind of steady gray rain that made every coat damp and every shoe squeak against the marble floor.

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The hallway outside Probate Courtroom Two was narrow enough that strangers kept brushing shoulders, but Hannah still felt completely alone.

She held a plain black folder against her ribs with both hands.

The folder was cheap, with one worn corner and a faint crease down the spine from where she had gripped it too hard in the car.

Inside were papers her family had spent thirty-one days pretending did not exist.

Across from her, Bria leaned beside Hannah’s mother like she had been born into that exact pose.

One ankle crossed over the other.

One cream blazer without a wrinkle.

One expensive purse tucked under her arm like evidence of a life already won.

Hannah’s mother, Lorna Price, wore navy and pearls.

Her father, Dean, wore the gray suit he saved for funerals, weddings, and situations where he wanted the room to assume he was respectable.

None of them looked at the empty chair beside Hannah.

That was the first cruelty of the morning.

Not Bria’s smile.

Not the whispers.

The chair.

Grandpa Harold should have been there, tapping his cane once against the floor whenever someone lied too loudly.

He had been dead for thirty-one days.

Thirty-one days before the hearing, Hannah had found his mug still warm on the kitchen table.

His glasses had been folded beside the newspaper.

His slippers had been pointed toward the back door as if he had stepped outside to check the tomatoes and would be back in a minute.

The house had not known what to do with his absence.

For two years, it had been full of tiny sounds that belonged to him.

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