Grandma’s Secret Deed Turned A Family Power Play Upside Down-myhoa

I was sitting at my grandmother’s kitchen table when my sister walked in like she had already changed the locks in her head.

The house still smelled like lemon soap, peppermint tea, and the old paperbacks Grandma kept stacked beside her recliner because she never believed in getting rid of a book that had made her feel less alone.

Morning light came through the lace curtains over the sink and fell across the oak table in soft little squares.

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I had made tea in her favorite china cup without thinking.

Six months after the funeral, my hands still reached for her cup before my brain remembered she was gone.

That was the part grief kept doing to me.

It did not always arrive as sobbing.

Sometimes it arrived as a second mug on the counter.

Sometimes it was the calendar still hanging beside the refrigerator, frozen on the month she passed, because taking it down felt too much like agreeing that she was not coming back.

I was tracing one finger around the blue flowers painted on the cup when the front door opened.

No knock.

No pause.

Just the click of heels in the hallway, sharp and sure.

Victoria appeared in the kitchen doorway with her cream coat draped around her shoulders and her blonde hair styled so perfectly it made the room feel messier just by comparison.

Behind her came my parents.

Mom looked nervous.

Dad looked tired.

Victoria looked pleased.

That was the order of the room before anyone said a word.

“Well,” Victoria said, dropping a slim folder onto the table, “we should talk about your timeline.”

I lifted the teacup slowly because my hands wanted to betray me.

“Good morning to you too, Vic.”

Her smile did not warm.

“Don’t make this harder than it needs to be, Emma.”

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