Sister Laughed At Dad's Funeral Until His Will Exposed Her Greed-ruby - Chainityai

Sister Laughed At Dad’s Funeral Until His Will Exposed Her Greed-ruby

The second I read Dad’s words out loud, Norine stopped breathing like the letter had reached across the desk and slapped her.

Mr. Feldman’s office went completely silent.

The sentence was simple. Dad had written it in the same careful hand he used for grocery lists and birthday cards. He said Norine had told him she was waiting for him to die so she could have his money.

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Then he wrote the line that ended her performance.

He chose the daughter who wanted him, not his money.

I could barely finish it.

For fifteen years, I had spent Sundays at Dad’s house because I loved him. Some weeks it was coffee and pancakes. Some weeks it was driving him to the cardiologist, arguing with insurance paperwork, or sitting beside him while he pretended he was not lonely.

It was never glamorous.

Love rarely is.

Norine stared at the letter. The red dress she had been so proud of suddenly looked loud and ugly under the office lights.

“Give me that,” she snapped.

Before I could move, she grabbed the page from my hands. Her eyes ran over the words again and again. I think she expected Dad to soften if she looked hard enough. I think she expected the dead to apologize.

Then she tore it in half.

The sound was small. Paper giving way. But it felt louder than her laughter at the funeral.

Mr. Feldman pressed a button on his desk phone. “Please call building security.”

Norine froze with the torn pieces still in her hands.

“That changes nothing,” he said calmly. “I have copies. The original is protected. The will is properly witnessed and notarized.”

She threw the pieces at him.

Then she turned on me.

She called me a snake. She said I had isolated Dad from his real family. She said I had spent years pretending to be the good daughter so I could steal the house, the savings, the car, and every box in his storage unit.

I wanted to answer.

I wanted to tell her about every Sunday she missed. I wanted to tell her how Dad still asked about her, how his face fell every time I said she was busy, how he kept pretending it did not hurt.

But grief had made my tongue useless.

Security came. Tony, Norine’s husband, stood from the corner where he had been sitting with his face red and his hands folded. He touched her arm and asked her to go.

She jerked away from him.

“You are supposed to be on my side.”

Tony looked at me once and mouthed, “I’m sorry.”

Norine pointed at me from the doorway. She said this was not over. She said I would pay for what I had done.

Three hours earlier, I had buried my father.

Now I was being threatened over his furniture.

I drove home in a fog. Fiona, my best friend, came over with takeout and wine. I cried so hard on her couch that my ribs hurt. She kept saying I had done nothing wrong, but wrong was not the only thing that hurt.

I was angry.

I was ashamed of being relieved.

I was heartbroken that Dad had seen the truth so clearly.

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