Her Brother Wanted the Lake House. Their Mother’s Note Ruined Him-Quieen - Chainityai

Her Brother Wanted the Lake House. Their Mother’s Note Ruined Him-Quieen

My brother smiled at our mother’s funeral like grief was just another room he could charm his way through.

He wore a black suit that looked expensive enough to pay for a month of Mom’s hospice supplies, polished shoes, and the little silver lapel pin he wore whenever he wanted strangers to remember he was a respected local businessman.

The church parking lot was cold and bright, the kind of winter morning where every windshield throws light back into your eyes.

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People were still carrying paper funeral programs.

Someone was crying near the back of a family SUV.

The little American flag by the chapel entrance kept snapping softly in the wind.

Derek leaned close enough that I could smell mint on his breath and wool on his sleeve.

“Enjoy the house while you can,” he whispered. “I’m taking it.”

Then he patted my shoulder in front of everybody like he was comforting me.

Like he had not just threatened to drag our dead mother’s last wish through court.

Like he had not spent the last six months being too busy to sit beside her bed.

Like he had not changed the locks on her garage before the flowers on her casket had even wilted.

I did not cry.

I did not yell.

For one clean second, I pictured my palm cracking across his face so loudly the whole parking lot would turn.

Then I swallowed it.

I had learned something during Mom’s final months.

Rage feels powerful for about five seconds.

Paper lasts longer.

So I looked at him and said quietly, “You should have read all of it.”

His smile moved, just a little.

“What?”

I turned away before he could see my hands shaking.

Because I had read all of it.

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