“Yes, you did,” I said.
Linda whirled. “Shut up.”
Linda’s jaw trembled.
“No,” I said. “You stole from her while she was dying.”
Linda’s eyes flashed. “It was mine anyway!”
My mom’s voice cut like a knife. “Stop saying that.”
Linda’s jaw trembled. She looked around for backup and found none.
Ray pointed at Linda’s cardigan pocket. “So the ring—”
“I didn’t want someone to steal it!”
Linda yanked it out and slapped it on the coffee table. “There! Happy? Take it!”
The stone caught the light. Too bright. Too clean. Wrong.
My mom stared as if she couldn’t make her eyes focus.
Ray let out a sharp laugh. “You had it in your pocket at the funeral.”
Linda hissed, “I didn’t want someone to steal it!”
“You humiliated yourself.”
“And this? Look at this mirror. This is sick.”
I took it from her. “It’s just a mirror.”
“She’s humiliating me!”
“You humiliated yourself, Linda.” My mom, always reasonable but honest.
Another envelope sat under the papers.
Linda spun. “Of course you’d say that. You always hated me.”
My mom didn’t blink. “I don’t hate you. I’m tired.”
I looked back into the box.
Another envelope sat under the papers, thick and sealed.
FOR KATE — OPEN IN FRONT OF EVERYONE.
“Grandma knew.”
Linda lunged.
I pulled it back.
“Give it! It could be for all of us,” she snapped.
I turned it so everyone could see the flap.
If anyone but her opens this, you’ll prove my point.
A bank slip folded tight.
Ray let out a low whistle. “Grandma knew.”
I stared at my family around me, entirely aware of the massive responsibility my grandma had left me
My hands were cold. My heart beat in my ears. Finally, I tore it open.
One page. A bank slip folded tight.
I unfolded the bank slip.
I read out loud because Grandma wanted witnesses.
“Kate. You are the only one I trust to do what needs doing.”
Linda scoffed. “Oh, spare me.”
I kept going. “There is a small account set aside for my funeral expenses and Grandpa’s headstone cleaning. This is not an inheritance. It is a responsibility.”
“Are you kidding me?”
I unfolded the bank slip. The balance wasn’t huge, but it was enough to cause trouble.
Linda’s eyes locked onto it. “That’s money.”
Ray’s voice turned sharp. “Don’t start.”
I read the next line. “Linda will try to twist this into a prize. She will cry. She will threaten. She will promise. Do not give it to her.”
“Are you kidding me?” Linda shot back
Linda’s mouth opened, then closed.
My mom told her to keep quiet.
Linda stared at her like she’d never seen her before. “You’re taking her side?”
My mom’s voice cracked. “I’m taking Mom’s side.”
Linda’s mouth opened, then closed.
I read the directive, slow and clear. “Within 24 hours, at Sunday dinner, you will read both letters out loud. All of it. Not to shame her, but to stop the lies that have stolen peace from this family.”
“You don’t understand!”
Linda jabbed a finger at me. “You’re going to do this? You’re going to put me on trial?”
Linda snapped, “You don’t understand!”
“We understand,” Ray said. “We’ve just been quiet.”
Leave a Comment