You do not open the letter yet.
You cannot.
Samuel adjusts his glasses.
“Your father was concerned Ricardo would attempt to use old marital ties, emotional pressure, or fraudulent paperwork to gain leverage over the property.”
You look toward the living room.
“Why didn’t Dad tell me the house was already mine?”
Samuel’s expression softens.
“He wanted you to care for him because you loved him, not because you felt ownership.”
Your throat tightens.
“I would have stayed anyway.”
“I know,” Samuel says. “So did he.”
Paula squeezes your hand.
The letter waits in front of you.
Finally, you open it.
My Mariana,
If you are reading this, I am where old men eventually go when they refuse to take their medicine properly. Don’t let Paula tell you I admitted that while alive.
A laugh breaks through your tears.
You keep reading.
You gave me my dignity in the last years of my life. You cooked terrible low-salt soup and pretended it tasted fine. You learned my medications. You sat beside me when I was afraid to sleep. I saw all of it. I did not always say thank you because fathers are often foolish with words. Thank you.
Your hand shakes.
This house is yours. Not because you sacrificed for it, but because it has always known your footsteps best. Do not let Ricardo’s guilt, Laura’s manners, or anyone’s greed convince you that grief means you must be generous. Generosity is for people who come with clean hands.
You pause.
That sentence settles into your bones.
If Nicholas is reading over your shoulder, stop snooping, kid. I love you. Protect your mother, but don’t become a man who thinks women need permission to be strong. Stand beside her, not in front of her unless danger requires it.
Nicholas turns away quickly.
You pretend not to see him wipe his face.
Live here if you want. Sell it if you want. Paint it purple if you want. Your mother would haunt you for that, but technically it is your choice. Just don’t let anyone turn this home into collateral for their failures.
I love you.
Dad
You press the letter to your chest.
For the first time since the funeral, you breathe fully.
Then Samuel clears his throat.
“There is also the matter of Ricardo.”
Your eyes lift.
“Yes.”
“Your divorce decree did not grant him any ownership rights. However, he appears to have used your former marriage and his old mailing address here to imply ties to the property in a loan application.”
You stare at him.
“He did what?”
Samuel opens another folder.
“Your father discovered it three months ago. Ricardo listed this house as a potential asset reference for a private business loan. Your father confronted him. Ricardo denied wrongdoing. Laura later appeared with a proposed power of attorney.”
You feel cold.
“So they were already planning this.”
“Yes.”
Paula mutters, “Parasites.”
Samuel’s mouth twitches.
“I would not phrase it that way in court, but essentially.”
Within a week, everything becomes public.
Not because you leak it.
Because Laura tries to control the story first.
She posts a long message online about “blended family cruelty,” “inheritance manipulation,” and how you are using grief to alienate Nicholas from his father.
That is her second mistake.
Because Nicholas responds.
Not with anger.
With the video.
He posts the exact section where your father says Ricardo has no claim, Laura tried to make him sign power of attorney, and Ellen Brooks is her cousin.
His caption is simple:
My grandfather recorded this before he died because he knew my dad and Laura would try to steal my mom’s house. Stop lying.
The post spreads through your town in hours.
Laura deletes her message.
Too late.
People saved screenshots.
People always do.
Ricardo calls Nicholas twenty-three times.
Nicholas does not answer.
Then Ricardo texts:
You embarrassed me. I’m your father.
Nicholas shows you the message.
His face is tight.
“What do I say?”
You sit beside him on the porch swing your father built.
“You don’t have to answer tonight.”
“But if I don’t, he’ll say I’m disrespectful.”
You look at your son.
Really look.
Sixteen. Angry. Hurt. Trying to decide what kind of man he will become while watching his father fail at it.
“Respect is not letting someone lie about your mother.”
His jaw trembles.
“He was going to take Grandpa’s house.”
“Yes.”
“And he didn’t care that we just buried him.”
“No.”
Nicholas looks away, blinking hard.
“I hate him right now.”
You touch his arm.
“That’s allowed.”
“Will I always?”
“I don’t know.”
“Do you?”
You think about Ricardo.
The man you married young.
The man who once made you laugh in grocery aisles.
The man who held Nicholas as a baby and cried because he said he had never loved anything so much.
The man who cheated, left, came back when convenient, and now tried to steal your father’s home through forged papers wrapped in funeral flowers.
“No,” you say finally. “I don’t hate him every minute.”
Nicholas looks at you.
“But I do believe what he chose.”
That becomes the sentence that guides you.
Not hate.
Belief.
You believe what Ricardo chose.
You believe what Laura chose.
And you act accordingly.
Detectives interview you, Paula, Samuel, Nicholas, Ricardo, Laura, and eventually Ellen Brooks, the notary.
Ellen breaks first.
People who commit fraud for family often imagine love will protect them.
It rarely does.
She admits Laura asked her to notarize documents using a signature sample Ricardo provided. Laura claimed your father had agreed but was too sick to attend signing. Ellen says she felt pressured.
Detectives are unimpressed.
The signature sample came from a Christmas card your father sent Ricardo years earlier.
That detail makes you furious in a new way.
They did not just forge him.
They used his kindness to do it.
Laura is charged with forgery, attempted fraud, conspiracy, and attempted elder financial exploitation. Ellen is charged too. Ricardo is charged after bank emails show he sent Laura scanned copies of your father’s signature and asked whether her cousin could “make it official.”
He tries to claim Laura acted alone.
Laura’s attorney produces the emails.
So much for loyalty.
At the first hearing, Ricardo avoids your eyes.
Laura does not.
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