The Forged Will In The Wall Made My Father Go Pale That Morning-tessa

Mom texted me at 8:14 on a Thursday morning, while I was standing in the living room of the house everyone said I deserved.

“Hand over the will and bank records from that house, or you’re tearing this family apart.”

The strange part was not the threat.

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The strange part was that she sent it before I had told her what we were looking for.

I stood with dust on my shoes, a contractor’s crowbar against the wall, and the smell of wet plaster in my throat.

Patrick O’Connor, the contractor, looked at my phone and then at me.

“That your mother?” he asked.

I nodded.

He did not say what we were both thinking.

Nobody innocent asks for evidence by name.

My grandmother Eleanor had been dead for three weeks by then.

At her funeral, my father Victor spoke about loyalty in a navy suit he wore like armor.

He told the church that Eleanor believed in legacy, while my mother Monica dabbed the corner of one eye with a tissue that never got wet.

I sat two rows back, holding the silver bracelet I had taken from Grandma’s wrist in the hospital.

It looked like costume jewelry.

That was what Monica called it when I asked the nurse if I could keep it.

“Take it if you want,” she said.

She had no idea it was the first thing Grandma left me.

The will reading happened in Samuel Pierce’s office in White Plains, in a conference room so beige it made grief feel like paperwork.

Pierce read quickly, without looking at me.

My parents received control of the Whitaker trust.

Vanessa, my older sister, received the Scarsdale house and the investments that went with it.

Then Pierce cleared his throat and said I would receive 14 Birch Hollow Road in Cold Spring.

The old house.

The ruined one.

The house nobody had visited in years.

My father turned his head slowly, like he had rehearsed the kindness out of his face.

“Your grandmother understood your limitations, Rowena,” he said.

Then he added, “She gave you what you could manage.”

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