At Grandma’s Will Reading, One Red Folder Changed the Whole Room-hihehu

My uncle called me a stranger on a Tuesday morning in February.

He said it in a conference room that smelled like burnt coffee, old paper, and lemon furniture polish.

Hartley & Bowen Law sat on the seventh floor of a brick building in downtown Columbus, high enough that the street noise came up softened by glass.

Image

Outside, gray slush clung to the curb in dirty ridges.

Inside, the heating vent ticked in the wall and made the room feel smaller every time it clicked.

I kept my wool coat on even though the room was too warm.

I had told myself in the elevator that I would sit down, listen, sign what needed signing, and go home without giving Richard Callaway a single moment he could use against me.

Then I saw him sitting across from the empty chair.

My uncle had both hands flat on the conference table, like he had already taken possession of the wood.

His wife, Sandra, sat beside him in a cream coat with gold buttons and tapped her phone with one glossy fingernail.

She did not look nervous.

She looked inconvenienced.

That told me more than any greeting could have.

“Morning, Maya,” Richard said.

Not honey. Not sweetheart. Not even “good to see you.”

Just my name, dropped on the table like a receipt.

Mr. Bowen came in carrying a leather document case, a yellow legal pad, and a stack of papers clipped neatly in the corner.

He was older than I remembered from Nana’s last appointment, with silver hair and the cautious movements of a man who had spent forty years watching families behave badly around money.

He shook Richard’s hand first.

Then Sandra’s.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *