He had expected to manage the situation.
He had walked into his mother’s death prepared to protect himself.
Robert lunged toward him. “You were collecting rent on Mom’s house?”
Daniel stepped back. “I was handling expenses!”
“What expenses?” Claudia demanded. “You told me the house was empty.”
Daniel looked at her. “You didn’t care enough to check.”
That shut her up.
For one raw second, the three of them stood exposed beneath the bright light their mother had refused to let you turn off.
Mr. O’Connell resumed.
“My final wishes are simple. I do not want a large funeral paid for with guilty money. I do not want speeches from children who did not know what medicine I took, what songs I liked, or what color dress I wore on Sundays while waiting for them.”
Claudia began sobbing now.
Real or not, you could not tell.
“I want to be buried beside my husband, Samuel. I want the blue dress. The pearls are fake, but they were mine. Do not replace them with expensive jewelry after death when you gave me no time in life.”
Your throat tightened.
You looked at Mrs. Whitaker’s hands, folded peacefully now over the blanket.
Mr. O’Connell continued.
“My estate will be handled as follows. My house on Blanco Road is to be sold. After legal fees and recovered funds, twenty percent will go to St. Raphael’s Senior Care Home to create a visitation fund for residents whose families live far away or cannot afford transportation.”
You inhaled sharply.
The attorney glanced briefly at you before reading on.
“Twenty percent will go to the nurses, aides, kitchen staff, and caregivers who treated me like a human being when my own blood treated me like an obligation.”
Robert looked furious. “She can’t do that.”
“She did,” Mr. O’Connell said.
“Caregivers?” Claudia cried. “Strangers?”
You felt heat rise behind your eyes.
Mrs. Whitaker had known.
She had known who brushed her hair, who brought her tea, who listened to her stories, who fixed her blanket, who sat with her during storms.
She had known who showed up.
Mr. O’Connell read the next line.
“Twenty percent will go to my grandchildren, but only through education accounts, because children should not pay for the sins of their parents.”
Daniel rubbed his face.
“And the remaining forty percent,” the attorney continued, “will go to the Mercedes Whitaker Foundation for Elder Dignity, established to provide legal support for abandoned seniors whose assets are being misused by relatives.”
The silence that followed was enormous.
Robert looked at the attorney like he had been struck. “So we get nothing?”
Mr. O’Connell folded the will carefully.
“That is incorrect. She left each of you one dollar.”
Claudia whispered, “One dollar?”
“Yes,” he said. “So no one could claim she forgot you.”
Daniel sat down on the edge of a chair, suddenly looking sick.
Mr. O’Connell lifted three smaller documents from the briefcase.
“And she left each of you a letter.”
Robert tore his open first.
His face changed as he read.
Claudia opened hers with shaking hands.
Daniel waited the longest.
You should have left the room. Professionally, maybe you should have stepped away and given them privacy. But Mrs. Whitaker had asked you to stay. She had told you that afternoon, “When the truth comes, don’t let them sweep it under the bed.”
So you stayed.
Robert’s letter was short.
You knew because he read it out loud in disbelief.
“Robert, you always measured love in what people could do for you. I gave you money when you were young because I thought helping you build a business meant I was building your future. Instead, I taught you to take without gratitude. I forgive myself for that mistake. I hope one day you learn to give without keeping score.”
Robert lowered the page.
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