The Final Clause In Their Father’s Will Made Her Brother Go Silent-Teptep

The final section of my father’s will was still unopened when my brother smiled at me like he had already won.

Garrett Merritt had always been good at that kind of smile.

It was the smile he used when he got the bigger bedroom after I spent a whole summer painting both rooms.

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It was the smile he used when Dad handed him the shop truck before he ever trusted me with the register.

It was the smile he used six days after our mother’s funeral, when he changed the locks on 14 Maple Lane and left my daughter’s things on the porch in the rain.

By the time I walked into Raymond Voss’s office that Monday morning, I had learned not to give that smile the dignity of a reaction.

The office sat on the second floor above Third Street, where traffic hissed over wet pavement and gray light pushed through old windows.

Everything smelled like coffee, damp wool, and paper that had sat too long in filing cabinets.

My daughter Norah’s sneakers were still drying in the motel bathroom.

Her stuffed rabbit was still propped beside the heater, one ear darker than the other from the storm.

Garrett had told me on the phone the night before that he hoped I enjoyed having nowhere to go.

I hung up before he could hear me shake.

At 9:17 a.m., I sat across from him at the walnut conference table with my hands folded in my lap.

Inside my handbag, my fingers rested against the brass key my father had hidden in the green metal toolbox he left me.

Raymond Voss, the estate attorney, sat at the head of the table with two leather folders in front of him.

He had represented my parents for as long as I could remember, and when I was little, he came by once a year with papers in a brown envelope while my mother poured coffee in the kitchen.

Now he adjusted his glasses and looked at all of us like we were a problem that had arrived in pieces.

Garrett sat in a charcoal suit, one hand near the first folder.

His wife, Sloan, sat beside him with her phone balanced in her lap.

She had always acted like she was too polite to be cruel, which only meant she preferred cruelty with a clean manicure.

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