At The Will Reading, My Mother Called Me Unstable — Then Nathan’s Attorney Opened The Second Envelope-thuyhien

The deadbolt gave one clean metallic click from inside the door.

My thumb came down on Robert Mercer’s name before anyone could open it.

He answered on the second ring. I could hear traffic behind him, a turn signal ticking, the low sealed hum of a town car.

“Fay?”

I kept my voice flat. “My mother, father, and Chloe are trying to get a psychiatrist to say I’m not clear enough to sign for myself.”

There was one beat of silence. Paper moved on his end. Then his tone changed.

“Do not sign anything. Do not let them drive you anywhere tomorrow. Can you text me the doctor’s full name?”

“Yes.”

“And can you get them to repeat the plan in front of me in the morning?”

The porch light stayed off. The moth kept striking the screen in tiny dry taps. Inside, the deadbolt turned the rest of the way.

“I can,” I said.

“Good. Walk in. Say as little as possible. I’ll have my office ready for eleven.”

The door opened before I could put the phone fully away.

My mother stood there in a soft beige cardigan with her mouth already arranged into concern. Behind her, the kitchen smelled like reheated coffee and lemon dish soap. My father stood near the sink with one hand around a mug. Chloe’s voice was still leaking out of the speakerphone on the counter, bright and distant and careless.

For one strange second, all three of them looked startled to see me, as if daughters were only real when discussed in advance.

Then my mother reached for the casserole dish.

“Oh, sweetheart,” she said. “Why are you standing out there in the cold?”

Nathan used to say my mother’s kindness had edges. He noticed it long before I was willing to admit it.

He noticed how she asked Chloe what color roses she wanted for her engagement dinner, then asked me if black was still “appropriate” at museum fundraisers. He noticed how my father never raised his voice, never slammed doors, never said anything openly cruel, but could reduce an entire person with one polite shrug and a glance at the clock. He noticed how holidays at their house moved around Chloe’s moods the way furniture moves around a grand piano.

The first Thanksgiving after Nathan and I married, my mother put Chloe in the dining room with the wedding china and seated us in the breakfast nook because, as she put it, “You two won’t mind cozy.” Nathan smiled, carried both our plates to the smaller table, and spent the next hour describing Renaissance funerary sculpture in such loving detail that I stopped hearing the clink of crystal from the other room.

On the drive home, he kept one hand on the wheel and said, “Your family doesn’t have to be the committee that approves your life.”

The dashboard lights painted his knuckles blue. Outside, New Jersey slid by in wet stripes of gas stations and dark trees.

I remember laughing once, short and tired.

“You make them sound like a zoning board.”

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